Age and Gender Differences in Relationships Among Emotion Regulation, Mood, and Mental Health
Author(s) -
Kouhei Masumoto,
Nozomi Taishi,
Mariko Shiozaki
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
gerontology and geriatric medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2333-7214
DOI - 10.1177/2333721416637022
Subject(s) - cognitive reappraisal , mood , expressive suppression , affect (linguistics) , cognition , psychology , mental health , clinical psychology , depressed mood , emotional regulation , negative mood , developmental psychology , psychiatry , communication
Objective: We investigated the effects of age on mood and mental health-mediated emotion regulation, such as cognitive reappraisal and expressive suppression, and examined whether these relationships differ according to gender. Method: We recruited 936 Japanese participants. They comprised six age groups ranging from 20 to 70 years old, with 156 participants in each age group and equal numbers of men and women. Results: Structural equation model analysis showed that older participants were more likely to use cognitive reappraisal, further enhancing positive mood and reducing negative mood, whereas, age did not affect expressive suppression. Moreover, expressive suppression had a smaller impact on mood than cognitive reappraisal. A multi-group analysis showed significant gender differences. In men, cognitive reappraisal increased with age and influenced mood more positively than in women. Discussion: Our findings indicated gender differences in aging effects on emotion regulation. We discussed about these results from the cognitive process, motivation to emotion regulation, and cultural differences
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