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Psychopathy Moderates the Relationship between Nature Connectedness and Cognitive Reappraisal

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Psychopathy Moderates the Relationship between Nature Connectedness and Cognitive Reappraisal. / Fido, Dean; Rees, Alice; Wallace, Louise et al.
In: Ecopsychology, Vol. 12, No. 4, 02.12.2020, p. 301-308.

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Fido D, Rees A, Wallace L, Mantzorou L. Psychopathy Moderates the Relationship between Nature Connectedness and Cognitive Reappraisal. Ecopsychology. 2020 Dec 2;12(4):301-308. doi: 10.1089/eco.2019.0075

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Fido, Dean ; Rees, Alice ; Wallace, Louise et al. / Psychopathy Moderates the Relationship between Nature Connectedness and Cognitive Reappraisal. In: Ecopsychology. 2020 ; Vol. 12, No. 4. pp. 301-308.

Bibtex

@article{85858d18591a421d9f055bdf74d1fe04,
title = "Psychopathy Moderates the Relationship between Nature Connectedness and Cognitive Reappraisal",
abstract = "The innate relationship that humans share with the natural world is becoming increasingly strained. Our connection to nature - reflected through the psychological construct of nature connectedness - has been shown to benefit areas of physical and mental well-being: of which, several relationships are thought to be mediated by ones' adaptive ability to regulate emotion. Emerging research has also indicated that nature connectedness and proficiency in emotion regulation share inverse relationships with deviant personality traits, such as psychopathy. However, it remains to be seen whether psychopathy, specifically, has a moderating role on the association between nature connectedness and emotion regulation. A total of 309 participants completed an online survey whereby they were asked to self-report nature connectedness, emotion regulation strategy use, and psychopathy. Pearson correlations indicated a positive association between scores on nature connectedness and the use of cognitive reappraisal, but not expressive suppression strategies: a relationship found to be weaker in individuals scoring higher in psychopathy through moderation analysis. Evidence reported here supports our hypotheses and indicates the necessity to acknowledge a more diverse array of personality constructs both when discussing the potential benefits of nature connectedness and when testing the efficacy of nature-based interventions as a means of bringing about health- and well-being-related change.",
keywords = "Cognitive reappraisal, Emotion regulation, Expression suppression, Nature connectedness, Psychopathy",
author = "Dean Fido and Alice Rees and Louise Wallace and Lamprini Mantzorou",
year = "2020",
month = dec,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1089/eco.2019.0075",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "301--308",
journal = "Ecopsychology",
issn = "1942-9347",
publisher = "Mary Ann Liebert Inc.",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Psychopathy Moderates the Relationship between Nature Connectedness and Cognitive Reappraisal

AU - Fido, Dean

AU - Rees, Alice

AU - Wallace, Louise

AU - Mantzorou, Lamprini

PY - 2020/12/2

Y1 - 2020/12/2

N2 - The innate relationship that humans share with the natural world is becoming increasingly strained. Our connection to nature - reflected through the psychological construct of nature connectedness - has been shown to benefit areas of physical and mental well-being: of which, several relationships are thought to be mediated by ones' adaptive ability to regulate emotion. Emerging research has also indicated that nature connectedness and proficiency in emotion regulation share inverse relationships with deviant personality traits, such as psychopathy. However, it remains to be seen whether psychopathy, specifically, has a moderating role on the association between nature connectedness and emotion regulation. A total of 309 participants completed an online survey whereby they were asked to self-report nature connectedness, emotion regulation strategy use, and psychopathy. Pearson correlations indicated a positive association between scores on nature connectedness and the use of cognitive reappraisal, but not expressive suppression strategies: a relationship found to be weaker in individuals scoring higher in psychopathy through moderation analysis. Evidence reported here supports our hypotheses and indicates the necessity to acknowledge a more diverse array of personality constructs both when discussing the potential benefits of nature connectedness and when testing the efficacy of nature-based interventions as a means of bringing about health- and well-being-related change.

AB - The innate relationship that humans share with the natural world is becoming increasingly strained. Our connection to nature - reflected through the psychological construct of nature connectedness - has been shown to benefit areas of physical and mental well-being: of which, several relationships are thought to be mediated by ones' adaptive ability to regulate emotion. Emerging research has also indicated that nature connectedness and proficiency in emotion regulation share inverse relationships with deviant personality traits, such as psychopathy. However, it remains to be seen whether psychopathy, specifically, has a moderating role on the association between nature connectedness and emotion regulation. A total of 309 participants completed an online survey whereby they were asked to self-report nature connectedness, emotion regulation strategy use, and psychopathy. Pearson correlations indicated a positive association between scores on nature connectedness and the use of cognitive reappraisal, but not expressive suppression strategies: a relationship found to be weaker in individuals scoring higher in psychopathy through moderation analysis. Evidence reported here supports our hypotheses and indicates the necessity to acknowledge a more diverse array of personality constructs both when discussing the potential benefits of nature connectedness and when testing the efficacy of nature-based interventions as a means of bringing about health- and well-being-related change.

KW - Cognitive reappraisal

KW - Emotion regulation

KW - Expression suppression

KW - Nature connectedness

KW - Psychopathy

U2 - 10.1089/eco.2019.0075

DO - 10.1089/eco.2019.0075

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85097396562

VL - 12

SP - 301

EP - 308

JO - Ecopsychology

JF - Ecopsychology

SN - 1942-9347

IS - 4

ER -