Implicit theories of emotion: Affective and social outcomes across a major life transition.
Boston College · University of California, Berkeley · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The authors demonstrate that people differ systematically in their implicit theories of emotion: Some view emotions as fixed (entity theorists), whereas others view emotions as more malleable (incremental theorists). Using a longitudinal and multimethod design, the authors show that implicit theories of emotion, as distinct from intelligence, are linked to both emotional and social adjustment during the transition to college. Before entering college, individuals who held entity (vs. incremental) theories of emotion had lower emotion regulation self-efficacy and made less use of cognitive reappraisal (Part 1). Throughout their first academic term, entity theorists of emotion had less favorable emotion…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.18
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 63
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Socioemotional selectivity theory
- Psychology
- Social cognition
- Cognition
- Social psychology
- Transition (genetics)
- Cognitive psychology
- Developmental psychology