Increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal : on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy
In emotion regulation, negative or undesired emotions are downregulated, but there are also opponent processes to emotion regulation—in which undesired emotions are exacerbated dynamically over time by processes that have an amplifying or upregulating impact. Evidence for such processes has been sho...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1431762020-08-11T03:15:05Z Increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal : on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy Wass, Sam V. Clackson, Kaili Leong, Vicky School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Psychology Emotion Regulation Arousal In emotion regulation, negative or undesired emotions are downregulated, but there are also opponent processes to emotion regulation—in which undesired emotions are exacerbated dynamically over time by processes that have an amplifying or upregulating impact. Evidence for such processes has been shown in adults, but little previous work has examined whether infants show similar patterns. To examine this, we measured physiological arousal in 57 typical 12 month olds while presenting a 20-min mixed viewing battery. Fluctuations in autonomic arousal were measured via heart rate, electrodermal activity, and movement. We reasoned that if transitions in autonomic arousal are random (stochastic), then (1) arousal would be normally distributed across the session, and (2) episodes where arousal exceeded a certain threshold above the mean should be as long-lived as those where arousal exceeded the same threshold below the mean. In fact we found that (1) heart rate and movement (but not electrodermal activity) were positively skewed, and (2) that increases in arousal have a lower extinction probability than decreases in arousal. Our findings may suggest that increases in arousal are self-sustaining. These patterns are the opposite of the homeostatic mechanisms predicted by naïve approaches to emotion regulation. Accepted version This research was funded by intramural Medical Research Council funding at the MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit in Cambridge and by ESRC Grant numbers ES/N006461/1 and ES/N017560/1. Thanks to Edmund SonugaBarke, Kaya de Barbaro and Emily Jones for useful discussions. 2020-08-11T03:03:53Z 2020-08-11T03:03:53Z 2018 Journal Article Wass, S. V., Clackson, K., & Leong, V. (2018). Increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal : on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy. Infancy, 23(5), 628-649. doi:10.1111/infa.12243 1525-0008 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143176 10.1111/infa.12243 2-s2.0-85046338780 5 23 628 649 en Infancy © 2018 International Congress of Infant Studies (ICIS). All rights reserved. This paper was published by Wiley Blackwell in Infancy and is made available with permission of International Congress of Infant Studies (ICIS). application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Psychology Emotion Regulation Arousal Wass, Sam V. Clackson, Kaili Leong, Vicky Increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal : on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy |
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In emotion regulation, negative or undesired emotions are downregulated, but there are also opponent processes to emotion regulation—in which undesired emotions are exacerbated dynamically over time by processes that have an amplifying or upregulating impact. Evidence for such processes has been shown in adults, but little previous work has examined whether infants show similar patterns. To examine this, we measured physiological arousal in 57 typical 12 month olds while presenting a 20-min mixed viewing battery. Fluctuations in autonomic arousal were measured via heart rate, electrodermal activity, and movement. We reasoned that if transitions in autonomic arousal are random (stochastic), then (1) arousal would be normally distributed across the session, and (2) episodes where arousal exceeded a certain threshold above the mean should be as long-lived as those where arousal exceeded the same threshold below the mean. In fact we found that (1) heart rate and movement (but not electrodermal activity) were positively skewed, and (2) that increases in arousal have a lower extinction probability than decreases in arousal. Our findings may suggest that increases in arousal are self-sustaining. These patterns are the opposite of the homeostatic mechanisms predicted by naïve approaches to emotion regulation. |
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School of Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences Wass, Sam V. Clackson, Kaili Leong, Vicky |
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Article |
author |
Wass, Sam V. Clackson, Kaili Leong, Vicky |
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Wass, Sam V. |
title |
Increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal : on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy |
title_short |
Increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal : on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy |
title_full |
Increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal : on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy |
title_fullStr |
Increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal : on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy |
title_full_unstemmed |
Increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal : on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy |
title_sort |
increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal : on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy |
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2020 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143176 |
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1681058298377273344 |