Dispositional self-compassion and responses to mood challenge in people at risk for depressive relapse/recurrence

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Abstract

This paper explores the relationship between dispositional self-compassion and cognitive emotion regulation capacities in individuals with a history of depression. Study 1 (n = 403) established that self-compassion was associated with increased use of positive and decreased use of negative strategies, with small to medium sized correlations. Study 2 (n = 68) was an experimental study examining the association between dispositional self-compassion, use of cognitive emotion regulation strategies, and changes in mood and self-devaluation in participants exposed to a negative mood induction followed by mood repair (mindfulness, rumination, silence). Individuals with higher levels of dispositional self-compassion showed greater mood recovery after mood induction, and less self-devaluation across the experimental procedure, independent of their mood-repair condition or habitual forms of cognitive emotion regulation. These results suggest that self-compassion is associated with more adaptive responses to mood challenges in individuals with a history of recurrent depression.

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Karl, A., Williams, M. J., Cardy, J., Kuyken, W., & Crane, C. (2018). Dispositional self-compassion and responses to mood challenge in people at risk for depressive relapse/recurrence. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, 25(5), 621–633. https://doi.org/10.1002/cpp.2302

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