The role of emotion and emotion regulation in social anxiety disorder.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to examine the role of emotion regulation in social anxiety disorder (SAD) and evaluate the effectiveness of mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) as an intervention.
Results Summary
The study reviewed empirical evidence supporting MBSR as a psychosocial intervention for SAD, alongside cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), suggesting potential benefits in emotion regulation. However, specific efficacy details or comparative outcomes were not highlighted in the abstract.
Population
Individuals with social anxiety disorder (SAD).
Effective Dosage
Not available
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) | neutral | social anxiety disorder (SAD) | - | - | examined the empirical evidence behind | #1 |
mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) | neutral | social anxiety disorder (SAD) | - | - | examined the empirical evidence behind | #2 |
Many psychiatric disorders involve problematic patterns of emotional reactivity and regulation. In this review, we consider recent findings regarding emotion and emotion regulation in the context of social anxiety disorder (SAD). We first describe key features of SAD which suggest altered emotional and self-related processing difficulties. Next, we lay the conceptual foundation for a discussion of emotion and emotion regulation and present a common framework for understanding emotion regulation, the process model of emotion regulation. Using the process model, we evaluate the recent empirical literature spanning self-report, observational, behavioral, and physiological methods across five specific families of emotion regulation processes-situation selection, situation modification, attentional deployment, cognitive change, and response modulation. Next, we examine the empirical evidence behind two psychosocial interventions for SAD: cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR). Throughout, we present suggestions for future directions in the continued examination of emotion and emotion regulation in SAD.