Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Mental illness and well‐being: an affect regulation perspective
View through CrossRef
Mental health crucially depends upon affective states such as emotions, stress responses, impulses and moods. These states shape how we think, feel and behave. Often, they support adaptive functioning. At other times, however, they can become detrimental to mental health via maladaptive affect generation processes and/or maladaptive affect regulation processes. Here, we present an integrative framework for considering the role of affect generation and regulation in mental illness and well‐being. Our model views affect generation as an iterative cycle of attending to, appraising and responding to situations. It views affect regulation as an iterative series of decisions aimed at altering affect generation. Affect regulation decisions include identifying what, if anything, should be changed about affect, selecting where to intervene in the affect generation cycle, choosing how to implement this intervention, and monitoring the regulation attempt to decide whether to maintain, switch or stop it. Difficulties with these decisions, often arising from biased inputs to them, can contribute to manifestations of mental illness such as clinical symptoms, syndromes and disorders. The model has a number of implications for clinical assessment and treatment. Specifically, it offers a common set of concepts for characterizing different affective states; it highlights interactions between affect generation and affect regulation; it identifies assessment and treatment targets among the component processes of affect regulation; and it is applicable to prevention and treatment of mental illness as well as to promotion and restoration of psychological well‐being.
Title: Mental illness and well‐being: an affect regulation perspective
Description:
Mental health crucially depends upon affective states such as emotions, stress responses, impulses and moods.
These states shape how we think, feel and behave.
Often, they support adaptive functioning.
At other times, however, they can become detrimental to mental health via maladaptive affect generation processes and/or maladaptive affect regulation processes.
Here, we present an integrative framework for considering the role of affect generation and regulation in mental illness and well‐being.
Our model views affect generation as an iterative cycle of attending to, appraising and responding to situations.
It views affect regulation as an iterative series of decisions aimed at altering affect generation.
Affect regulation decisions include identifying what, if anything, should be changed about affect, selecting where to intervene in the affect generation cycle, choosing how to implement this intervention, and monitoring the regulation attempt to decide whether to maintain, switch or stop it.
Difficulties with these decisions, often arising from biased inputs to them, can contribute to manifestations of mental illness such as clinical symptoms, syndromes and disorders.
The model has a number of implications for clinical assessment and treatment.
Specifically, it offers a common set of concepts for characterizing different affective states; it highlights interactions between affect generation and affect regulation; it identifies assessment and treatment targets among the component processes of affect regulation; and it is applicable to prevention and treatment of mental illness as well as to promotion and restoration of psychological well‐being.
Related Results
Alteration
Alteration
\r Mental illness is surprisingly far more common than people care to believe. This is in part due to the stigma which follows close behind it. Stigma, a mark of disgrace, began be...
A Comparative Study on the Sexual Functioning among Men with and without Severe Mental Illness
A Comparative Study on the Sexual Functioning among Men with and without Severe Mental Illness
Objective: The aim of the study is to compare the sexual functioning among men with and without severe mental illness.
Materials and Methods: The study was conducted in Psych...
Attitude and Its’ associated factors towards Mental Illness Among Residents of Mertule Mariam Town, Northern Ethiopia: Mixed Method
Attitude and Its’ associated factors towards Mental Illness Among Residents of Mertule Mariam Town, Northern Ethiopia: Mixed Method
Abstract
Background: Mental illness affects cognition, emotion, and behavior of an individual. It accounts for 13% of the global burden of diseases. About 76% and 85% of pe...
PSYCHIATRY POSTING AMONG NURSING STUDENTS: ATTITUDE TO MENTAL ILLNESS
PSYCHIATRY POSTING AMONG NURSING STUDENTS: ATTITUDE TO MENTAL ILLNESS
Background: Attitude towards mental illness influence the nursing students’ choice to take up training and placement in psychiatry as a specialty. The aim of the study was to exami...
Exploring the problem gambling health-harm paradox
Exploring the problem gambling health-harm paradox
Purpose: Previous research by NatCen identified a potential health-harm paradox for mental wellbeing and gambling, finding that those with poor mental wellbeing or a diagnosed ment...
Psychological factors and customized learning pathways in curriculum design
Psychological factors and customized learning pathways in curriculum design
This study explores the prevalence of mental health and learning pathways among undergraduate students in Kwara State, Nigeria. It examines the relationship between personality tra...
Community perception towards mental illness and help-seeking intention in Southwest Ethiopian Peoples Regional State
Community perception towards mental illness and help-seeking intention in Southwest Ethiopian Peoples Regional State
Background
Community perception of mental illness is a collective belief system and attitude about mental disorders; it affects the availability of services, the level of stigma, a...
Knowledge, attitude, and its correlates of the community toward mental illness in Mattu, South West Ethiopia
Knowledge, attitude, and its correlates of the community toward mental illness in Mattu, South West Ethiopia
BackgroundThe magnitude of mental health conditions in the general population was high in low-resource settings like Ethiopia. This was accompanied by little evidence on knowledge,...

