Relations between lab indices of emotion dysregulation and negative affect reactivity in daily life in two independent studies

J Affect Disord. 2022 Jan 15:297:217-224. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.10.031. Epub 2021 Oct 23.

Abstract

Background: We investigated the extent to which physiological/biological measures of emotion dysregulation collected in the lab, resting respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) in Study 1 and amygdala activation in response to negative stimuli in Study 2, combined with daily measures of interpersonal stressors predicted negative emotional states in outpatients better than the stressors alone.

Methods: Participants were adult outpatients with emotional distress disorders (N=30 individuals in Study 1, and N=26 women in Study 2). After completing a laboratory session that collected physiological/biological measures of emotion dysregulation, participants then completed 1-3 weeks of ambulatory assessment during which they reported on interpersonal stressors and negative affective states several times per day.

Results: Laboratory measures of emotion dysregulation were largely unrelated to either momentary or mean levels of daily-life hostility, sadness, and fear in both studies. However, resting RSA significantly moderated the association between day-level interpersonal stressors and momentary fear such that low resting RSA strengthened this association. Similarly, amygdala activation tended to moderate this relationship in the predicted direction.

Limitations: Both samples were relatively small and focused on only a limited set of diagnoses associated with emotion dysregulation. Only two possible physiological/biological markers of emotion dysregulation were examined.

Conclusions: The current studies support the collection of physiological/biological data on emotion dysregulation when indexing daily-life emotion dysregulation as the degree of emotional reactivity to stressors in daily life among outpatients with emotional distress disorders.

Keywords: Emotion dysregulation; Multi-level models; Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA); ambulatory assessment; amygdala activation.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Emotions
  • Fear
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Laboratories*
  • Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia*
  • Sadness