Taking charge of one's feelings: sense of power and affect regulation
Taking charge of one's feelings: sense of power and affect regulation
People who can effectively regulate their feelings benefit from more desirable affective lives. Here we examine whether individual differences in chronic feelings of power are associated with regulatory efforts aimed at maintaining positive affect and ceasing negative affect. In Study 1, we found that people with a stronger (vs. weaker) sense of power were more inclined to cognitively re-frame (reappraise) and up-regulate (repair) their affective experiences, whilst also being less inclined to suppress their feelings. Drawing on affective experiences sampled repeatedly over a one-week period, in Study 2 we found that people with a stronger (vs. weaker) sense of power were more likely to cease their negative affect. However, a stronger (vs. weaker) sense of power was not associated with the likelihood to maintain positive affect. Together, the findings highlight a novel domain in which power may enhance self-regulation, and help explain how power differentials shape people's affective and social lives.
Affect, Affect regulation, Emotion regulation, Mood, Power
Leach, Stefan
6bdc5639-c135-46b8-bcf9-2dd00646ee9a
Weick, Mario
7041ee4c-3143-45de-871d-0cde27f4a8f8
13 March 2020
Leach, Stefan
6bdc5639-c135-46b8-bcf9-2dd00646ee9a
Weick, Mario
7041ee4c-3143-45de-871d-0cde27f4a8f8
Leach, Stefan and Weick, Mario
(2020)
Taking charge of one's feelings: sense of power and affect regulation.
Personality and Individual Differences, 161, [109958].
(doi:10.1016/j.paid.2020.109958).
Abstract
People who can effectively regulate their feelings benefit from more desirable affective lives. Here we examine whether individual differences in chronic feelings of power are associated with regulatory efforts aimed at maintaining positive affect and ceasing negative affect. In Study 1, we found that people with a stronger (vs. weaker) sense of power were more inclined to cognitively re-frame (reappraise) and up-regulate (repair) their affective experiences, whilst also being less inclined to suppress their feelings. Drawing on affective experiences sampled repeatedly over a one-week period, in Study 2 we found that people with a stronger (vs. weaker) sense of power were more likely to cease their negative affect. However, a stronger (vs. weaker) sense of power was not associated with the likelihood to maintain positive affect. Together, the findings highlight a novel domain in which power may enhance self-regulation, and help explain how power differentials shape people's affective and social lives.
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 February 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 March 2020
Published date: 13 March 2020
Keywords:
Affect, Affect regulation, Emotion regulation, Mood, Power
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Local EPrints ID: 507624
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507624
ISSN: 0191-8869
PURE UUID: e7132166-c32f-4900-8735-7f95d2da28c6
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Date deposited: 16 Dec 2025 17:33
Last modified: 18 Dec 2025 03:20
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Author:
Stefan Leach
Author:
Mario Weick
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