Robinson KCornes JPKarl JAWilson MSGrimshaw GM2024-11-262024-11-262024-10-01Robinson K, Cornes JP, Karl JA, Wilson MS, Grimshaw GM. (2024). Emotion dysregulation in nonsuicidal self-injury: Dissociations between global self-reports and real-time responses to emotional challenge.. J Affect Disord. 362. (pp. 835-842).0165-0327https://mro.massey.ac.nz/handle/10179/72089INTRODUCTION: Prominent theories of nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) propose that the behaviour is characterised by amplified emotional responses. However, little is known about how people who self-injure respond during emotional challenge. METHODS: We measured subjective and physiological responding (heart rate, heart rate variability, and electrodermal responding) among young adults with past-year NSSI (n = 51) and those with no lifetime NSSI (n = 50) during a resting baseline, a stress induction, and a post-stress resting phase. Participants reported the extent to which they spontaneously used cognitive reappraisal and expressive suppression during the post-stress phase. Two weeks later, a subset of the sample (n = 42) reported how they remembered feeling during the laboratory session. RESULTS: Although the NSSI group reported considerably greater emotion dysregulation than Controls, both groups showed similar subjective and psychological reactivity to, and recovery from, emotional challenge. Both groups used reappraisal and suppression regulation strategies following acute stress to a similar extent, and later came to remember the emotional challenge in a similar manner. LIMITATIONS: Within the NSSI group, past-year self-injury tended to be infrequent and sporadic. Only 43.6% of the sample participated in the follow-up survey assessing memory of emotional challenge. CONCLUSIONS: Findings demonstrate that the role of emotion in NSSI is more complex than prominent theories can account for, raising substantial questions regarding the nature of emotion in NSSI. A more comprehensive understanding of the role of emotion in NSSI is needed to inform intervention strategies to better support people who self-injure.(c) 2024 The Author/sCC BY 4.0https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Emotion reactivityEmotion regulationEmotional challengeNonsuicidal self-injuryPsychophysiologyHumansSelf-Injurious BehaviorFemaleMaleYoung AdultHeart RateSelf ReportEmotionsAdultGalvanic Skin ResponseEmotional RegulationStress, PsychologicalAdolescentEmotion dysregulation in nonsuicidal self-injury: Dissociations between global self-reports and real-time responses to emotional challengeJournal article10.1016/j.jad.2024.07.1291573-2517journal-article835-842https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/39032715S0165-0327(24)01187-X