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Circadian typology is related to emotion regulation, metacognitive beliefs and assertiveness in healthy adults

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  • Juan Manuel Antúnez

Abstract

Circadian typology has been related to several mental health aspects such as resilience, perceived well-being, emotional intelligence and psychological symptoms and disorders. However, the relationship between circadian typology and emotion regulation, metacognitions and assertiveness, which constitute core constructs related to psychological well-being and psychopathology, remain unexplored. This study aims to analyze whether circadian typology is related with those three constructs, considering the possible influence of sex. 2283 participants (833 women), aged 18–60 years (30.37 ± 9.26 years), completed the reduced Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire, the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire, the Meta-Cognitions Questionnaire 30, and the Rathus Assertiveness Schedule. Main effects were observed between circadian typology and cognitive reappraisal, metacognitions, negative beliefs of uncontrollability and danger, cognitive confidence, cognitive self-consciousness, and assertiveness (F(2,2276) > 4.80, p 0.004, in all cases). Morning-type participants scored lower than evening-type in general metacognitive beliefs, negative beliefs of uncontrollability and danger, cognitive confidence, and cognitive self-consciousness, and higher than evening-type in cognitive reappraisal and assertiveness, while neither-type exhibited intermediate scores (p

Suggested Citation

  • Juan Manuel Antúnez, 2020. "Circadian typology is related to emotion regulation, metacognitive beliefs and assertiveness in healthy adults," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 15(3), pages 1-14, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0230169
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0230169
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