The conditional process model of mindfulness and emotion regulation: an empirical test
Files
Accepted manuscript
Date
2017-04-01
Authors
Curtiss, Joshua E.
Klemanski, David H.
Andrews, Leigh
Ito, Masaya
Hofmann, Stefan G.
Version
OA Version
Citation
Joshua Curtiss, David H Klemanski, Leigh Andrews, Masaya Ito, Stefan G Hofmann. 2017. "The conditional process model of mindfulness and emotion regulation: An empirical test.." J Affect Disord, Volume 212, pp. 93 - 100.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The conditional process model (CPM) of mindfulness and emotion regulation posits that specific mediators and moderators link these constructs to mental health outcomes. The current study empirically examined the central tenets of the CPM, which posit that nonreactivity moderates the indirect effect of observation on symptoms of emotional disorders through cognitive emotion regulation strategies. METHODS: A clinical sample (n=1667) of individuals from Japan completed a battery of self-report instruments. Several path analyses were conducted to determine whether cognitive emotion regulation strategies mediate the relationship between observation and symptoms of individual emotional disorders, and to determine whether nonreactivity moderated these indirect effects. RESULTS: Results provided support the CPM. Specifically, nonreactivity moderated the indirect effect of observation on symptoms through reappraisal, but it did not moderate the indirect effect of observation on symptoms through suppression. LIMITATIONS: Causal interpretations are limited, and cultural considerations must be acknowledged given the Japanese sample CONCLUSIONS: These results underscore the potential importance of nonreactivity and emotion regulation as targets for interventions.
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License
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International