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Therapeutic Interventions - Coggle Diagram
Therapeutic Interventions
Interventions to increase PED
mindfulness based intervention
Following a mindfulness based intervention, PED significantly improved only at the 4-month follow-up and remained significant even after controlling for mean levels of PA. (Van der Gucht et al., 2019)
emotion word knowledge intervention
PED improved following an experimental emotion knowledge intervention, though it wasn't significant. (Vedernikova et al., 2021)
Interventions to increase NED
experiential diversity
increased experiential diversity, or variation and balancedness of contexts and activities in an individual's daily lives, was associated with increased NED. (Hoemann et al., 2021a; Hoemann et al., 2020; Carlier et al., 2021)
emotion word knowledge intervention
participants who demonstrated higher engagement to the word learning task (an emotion word knowledge intervention) showed increased NED following the task. (Matt et al., 2024)
NED significantly improved after the experimental emotion knowledge intervention. (Vedernikova et al., 2021)
emotion regulation therapy
Caregivers of cancer patients receiving immediate emotion regulation therapy (ERT-C), as opposed to waiting an 8-week period before receiving treatment, experienced greater increases in NED. (Mikkelsen et al., 2021)
mindfulness based intervention
In a study investigating efficacy of a mindfulness based intervention, NED significantly improved post-intervention and at the 4-month follow-up. However, this improvement was no longer significant when controlling for mean levels of NA, indicating that changes in NA levels play a role in enhancing NED. (Van der Gucht et al., 2019)
Interventions to increase general EG
ESM
14-day experience sampling had a medium treatment effect and was larger for positive granularity than for negative granularity. (Hoemann et al., 2021a)
ESM involvement correlated to an improvement in ED 3 days/week for 6 weeks, but only significantly for NED and not PED (Widdershoven et al., 2019)
The relationship between the number of ESM measurements (dose) and ED change (response) was not significant. (Widdershoven et al., 2019)