The empirical status of implicit emotion regulation in mood and anxiety disorders: A meta-analytic review.

Publication date: Mar 21, 2025

Strategies to successfully regulate negative emotions may be hindered by maladaptive implicit emotion processing tendencies, and while implicit emotion regulation is known to be impaired in many psychiatric disorders, contradictory findings exist within the empirical literature. Therefore, a meta-analysis of implicit emotion regulation in mood and anxiety disorders (major depressive disorder [MDD], bipolar disorder, generalised anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder [PTSD]) was performed. Systematic literature searches were conducted in Web of Science, PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, and BrainMap for articles published between 2011 and 2024, and inclusion criteria included internationally recognised diagnostic measures (i. e., DSM-5). A total of 23 clinical studies were identified and using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, 21 studies were of excellent quality. Small to medium effect sizes were reported in patients across measures of accuracy (patients [n = 428] vs. controls [n = 412], standardised mean difference [SMD] -0. 39, 95 % CI [-0. 57 to -0. 21], p 

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Concepts Keywords
Empirical Anxiety disorders
Ottawa Automatic emotion regulation
Psychiatric Emotion regulation
Implicit emotion regulation
meta-analysis
Mood disorders
Unconscious emotion regulation

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH anxiety disorders
disease MESH psychiatric disorders
disease MESH major depressive disorder
disease MESH bipolar disorder
disease MESH disorder social anxiety
disease MESH disorder panic
disease MESH post-traumatic stress disorder
disease MESH Mood disorders

Original Article

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