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Positive reappraisals after an offense: Event-related potentials and emotional effects of benefit-finding and compassion*
Authors:Justin C. Baker  John K. Williams  Charlotte V.O. Witvliet  Peter C. Hill
Affiliation:1. Lieutenant, Medical Service Corps, US Navy, Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, Portsmouth, VA, USA;2. Rosemead School of Psychology, Biola University, La Mirada, CA, USA;3. Psychology Department, Hope College, Holland, MI, USA
Abstract:Using a within-subjects design, three emotion regulation strategies (compassion-focused reappraisal, benefit-focused reappraisal, and offense rumination) were tested for their effects on forgiveness, well-being, and event-related potentials. Participants (N = 37) recalled a recent interpersonal offense as the context for each emotion regulation strategy. Both decisional and emotional forgiveness increased significantly for the two reappraisal strategies compared to offense rumination. Compassion-focused reappraisal prompted the greatest increase in both decisional and emotional forgiveness. Furthermore, both reappraisal strategies increased positively oriented well-being measures (e.g. joy, gratitude) compared to offense rumination, with compassion-focused reappraisal demonstrating the largest effect on empathy. Late positive potential (LPP) amplitudes in response to unpleasant affect words were larger following the benefit-focused reappraisal strategy, indicating frontal LPP augmentation due to affective incongruence of the unpleasant stimuli with the positive, silver-lining orientation of the benefit-focused reappraisal emotion regulation strategy.
Keywords:Forgiveness  empathy  reappraisal  compassion  benefit-finding  late positive potential  event-related potential
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