Effects of emotion regulation strategies on anxiety during job interviews in Chinese college students |
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Authors: | Ling Gong Wen Li Detlef H. Rost |
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Affiliation: | 1. Center for Mental Health Education, School of Psychology, Southwest University, No. 2 Tiansheng Road, BeiBei District, Chongqing 400715, China;2. Psychological Consultation Center, East China Jiaotong University, Changbei Open and Developing District, Nanchang, Jiangxi 330013, China;3. ShenZhen (NanShan) Concord?College?of?Sino-Canada, NO. 166 NanGuang Road, NanShan District, ShenZhen, 518052, China;4. Department Child and Youth Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, Philipps-Universit?t Marburg, Gutenbergstr. 18, 35043 Marburg, Germany |
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Abstract: | ![]() Background and objectives: Few studies related to the impact of different emotion regulation strategies on anxiety have used externally and ecologically valid emotion-eliciting stimuli or Eastern populations. The present study compares the effects of reappraisal, suppression, and acceptance on anxiety induced by a simulated job interview in a Chinese sample. Methods: Eighty-two subjects were randomly assigned to one of four instructions: reappraisal, suppression, acceptance, or no-regulation strategies during a simulated job interview. Anxiety was assessed with an observer-based behavior rating scale during the interview and the State Anxiety Inventory before, during, and after the interview. Results: A repeated-measures MANOVA indicated a significantly greater reduction in anxiety in the reappraisal and acceptance groups compared to the control group during the interview (reappraisal: d = 1.42; acceptance: d = 1.30; each p < .001), but not during the recovery stage. The suppression and control group did not differ in any stage. Suppression led to a higher (pmax < .04) anxiety than reappraisal/acceptance in the anticipation (d = 0.65/0.68), interview (d = 0.87/0.79), and recovery stages (d = 0.94/1.03). No significant differences were found between reappraisal and acceptance. Conclusions: In Chinese students reappraisal and acceptance seem to be more effective anxiety regulation strategies than suppression. |
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Keywords: | emotion regulation reappraisal suppression acceptance anxiety experiment job interview |
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