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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2024 Oct 1.
Published in final edited form as: Emotion. 2023 Mar 13;23(7):1876–1890. doi: 10.1037/emo0001220

Table 8.

Associations between Habitual Emotion Judgments and Psychological Health

Simple correlations Results from multiple regressions predicting psychological health from all
four judgments

Pearson’s r β 95% CI p
Positive judgment of positive emotions .32 / .31 / .24 .37 / .28 / .13 [.21, .52] / [.14, .42] / [.02, .24] < .001 /<.001 / .02
Negative judgment of positive emotions −.27 / −.26 / −.35 .02 / −.12 / − .23 [−.14, .18] / [−.27, .03] / [−.35, −.11] .80 / .11 /<.001
Positive judgment of negative emotions .05 / .16 / .16 −.09 / .11 / .06 [−.22, .04] / [−.02, .24] / [−.06, .16] .17 / .10 / .30
Negative judgment of negative emotions −.25 / −.25 / −.41 −.32 / −.25 / −.35 [−.45, −.20] / [−.38, −.12] / [−.45, −.24] < .001 / <.001 /<.001

Note. Results are shown for Sample B / Sample C / Sample E. CI=confidence interval. Statistically significant associations (p<.05) are shown in bold. Multiple regression model R2 =.19 / .19 / .26.