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Childhood maltreatment is associated with a higher risk for developing psychological disorders, such as depression or anxiety. Dysfunctional emotion regulation (ER) has been implicated as a neurocognitive mechanism linking adverse childhood experiences to an increased risk for psychopathological outcomes. This pre-registered study investigated the relation between childhood maltreatment and different aspects of ER, including implementation capacity and effort as well as tendency and flexibility in strategy selection. In a non-clinical adult sample ( N = 227), childhood maltreatment was assessed with the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. In two experimental ER tasks, participants viewed pictures of varying emotional intensity while applying one of three ER strategies (distraction, reappraisal, suppression) or without any active regulation. The ER implementation task allowed to assess emotion reactivity, implementation capacity, and subjective effort for ER. The ER selection task allowed to assess tendency and flexibility in strategy selection. Childhood maltreatment was associated with a lower capacity to implement reappraisal ( r = −0.12), and a stronger tendency to choose suppression ( r = 0.15). Contrary to our hypotheses, there was no significant association to experimentally assessed emotion reactivity, subjective effort exerted on ER, or ER flexibility. We show that people with childhood maltreatment experiences do not only choose suppression more frequently but seem to have a lower capacity to implement reappraisal to reduce negative affect. This sheds light on potentially underlying mechanisms of difficulties in ER after childhood maltreatment. • Childhood maltreatment (CM) and a range of mental disorders have been associated with emotion regulation difficulties. • We replicate the association between CM and a more frequent use of suppression in an experimental design. • CM was also associated with a lower capacity for reappraisal. • Flexibility in emotion regulation and emotion regulation effort were not associated with CM. • These findings shed light on the cognitive mechanisms underlying emotion regulation difficulties after CM.
Armbruster‐Genc et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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