The role of executive function in cognitive reappraisal: a meta-analytic review
Cognitive reappraisal refers to the reinterpretation of a situation to alter its emotional meaning. Theoretically, executive functions (EFs), such as inhibition, updating, and shifting, are core elements of reappraisal processes. However, empirical studies have yielded inconsistent evidence as to...
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Main Authors: | , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2024
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Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178436 |
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Institution: | Nanyang Technological University |
Language: | English |
Summary: | Cognitive reappraisal refers to the reinterpretation of a situation to alter its emotional meaning. Theoretically,
executive functions (EFs), such as inhibition, updating, and shifting, are core elements of reappraisal
processes. However, empirical studies have yielded inconsistent evidence as to whether and to what extent
EFs are associated with reappraisal. To address this issue, we conducted a meta-analysis of the literature in
which 179 effect sizes from 59 independent samples (N = 4,703) were included. Using random-effects
metaregression with robust-variance estimates and small-sample corrections, we also examined whether
variation in effect sizes could be accounted for by potential moderators, such as the way reappraisal was
assessed (i.e., questionnaires vs. task-based measures) and the type of stimuli used in EF tasks (i.e., affective
vs. nonaffective). Overall, results indicate relatively small to typical associations between reappraisal and
all three EFs (rs = .13–.19). While the way reappraisal was measured did not moderate any of the relations
between EF and reappraisal, we found stronger relations between inhibition and reappraisal when EF was
assessed using tasks that involved affective, relative to nonaffective, stimuli. Our meta-analytic findings
offer modest support for the idea that EFs are cognitive constituents of reappraisal processes. |
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