Fluid cognitive ability is a resource for successful emotion regulation in older and younger adults

scientific article

Fluid cognitive ability is a resource for successful emotion regulation in older and younger adults is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.3389/FPSYG.2014.00609
P932PMC publication ID4060296
P698PubMed publication ID24987387
P5875ResearchGate publication ID263704516

P50authorJames GrossQ1680617
P2093author name stringHeather L Urry
Ihno A Lee
Philipp C Opitz
P2860cites workTaking time seriously. A theory of socioemotional selectivityQ28141265
Insights into the ageing mind: a view from cognitive neuroscienceQ28239895
Individual differences in some (but not all) medial prefrontal regions reflect cognitive demand while regulating unpleasant emotionQ28750393
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Individual differences in two emotion regulation processes: implications for affect, relationships, and well-beingQ34222141
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Cognitive reappraisal self-efficacy mediates the effects of individual cognitive-behavioral therapy for social anxiety disorderQ36179441
Divergent associations of adaptive and maladaptive emotion regulation strategies with inflammationQ37222375
Looking while unhappy: mood-congruent gaze in young adults, positive gaze in older adultsQ37385022
Age differences in managing response to sadness elicitors using attentional deployment, positive reappraisal and suppressionQ37656323
Emotion regulation: taking stock and moving forwardQ38092833
An evaluation of the Mars Letter Contrast Sensitivity TestQ38486002
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Evidence for utilitarian motives in emotion regulationQ47964466
Should people pursue feelings that feel good or feelings that do good? Emotional preferences and well-beingQ48011137
Prefrontal mediation of age differences in cognitive reappraisalQ48105165
Is seeking bad mood cognitively demanding? Contra-hedonic orientation and working-memory capacity in everyday lifeQ48139035
Seeking pleasure and seeking pain: differences in prohedonic and contra-hedonic motivation from adolescence to old age.Q48248634
Rethinking feelings: an FMRI study of the cognitive regulation of emotionQ48421581
Affective and cardiovascular responding to unpleasant events from adolescence to old age: complexity of events matters.Q50581364
When getting angry is smart: emotional preferences and emotional intelligence.Q50591293
Seeing, thinking, and feeling: emotion-regulating effects of gaze-directed cognitive reappraisal.Q50707909
Working memory capacity and the self-regulation of emotional expression and experience.Q50768198
Better late than never? On the dynamics of online regulation of sadness using distraction and cognitive reappraisal.Q50884720
The tie that binds? Coherence among emotion experience, behavior, and physiology.Q50963881
For better or for worse: neural systems supporting the cognitive down- and up-regulation of negative emotion.Q50989372
Multilevel models for the experimental psychologist: foundations and illustrative examples.Q51983940
Executive functioning as a potential mediator of age-related cognitive decline in normal adultsQ56883605
Guidelines for human electromyographic researchQ69735339
Improving the design of the letter contrast sensitivity testQ81782026
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectemotional self-regulationQ2267800
P304page(s)609
P577publication date2014-06-17
P1433published inFrontiers in PsychologyQ2794477
P1476titleFluid cognitive ability is a resource for successful emotion regulation in older and younger adults
P478volume5

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cites work (P2860)
Q53279971Age differences in emotion regulation effort: Pupil response distinguishes reappraisal and distraction for older but not younger adults.
Q64896295Age-related decline in positive emotional reactivity and emotion regulation in a population-derived cohort.
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