The Moderating Role of Anxiety on the Relationship Between CU Traits and Emotion Regulation
Spencer, Aly
Spencer, Aly
Citations
Altmetric:
License
License
DOI
Abstract
Primary psychopathy is characterized by CU traits and low to average levels of anxiety, while secondary psychopathy is characterized by CU traits and high levels of anxiety. Previous studies have found that anxiety moderates the association between psychopathy and a number of theoretically important variables. For example, the relationship between CU traits and self-reports of affective empathy is not moderated by anxiety. However, CU traits are negatively associated with self-reports of cognitive empathy at high levels of anxiety and positively associated with self-reports of cognitive empathy at low levels of anxiety. Previous studies have not explored the moderating effect of anxiety on the relationship between CU traits and emotion regulation, a construct associated with aggression and psychopathologies like depression and anxiety. In the present study, we examined the relationship between emotion regulation, anxiety, and callous-unemotional traits by testing two moderation models. In the first, we examined whether the relationship between emotion regulation and anxiety was moderated by the presence of CU traits. In the second, we tested whether the relationship between CU traits and emotion regulation was moderated by anxiety symptoms. Our results indicated that emotion regulation skills were more negatively associated with measures of anxiety among individuals with high CU traits than among those with low CU traits. Within our second model, we found that CU did significantly predict poorer emotion regulation. However, this relationship was not significantly moderated by symptoms of anxiety. These results suggest that the presence of anxiety among those with CU traits is influenced by emotion regulation capacity. Differences in emotion regulation may contribute to the varying levels of anxiety among individuals with primary versus secondary psychopathy.
Description
3:00 PM
3:00pm-5:00pm
Undergraduate
3:00pm-5:00pm
Undergraduate
Date
2019-01-01
