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Maxime Résibois

Researcher at Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

Publications -  9
Citations -  662

Maxime Résibois is an academic researcher from Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. The author has contributed to research in topics: Perspective (graphical) & Rumination. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 8 publications receiving 406 citations. Previous affiliations of Maxime Résibois include Université catholique de Louvain.

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Do Social Network Sites Enhance or Undermine Subjective Well‐Being? A Critical Review

TL;DR: In this paper, the consequences of interacting with social network sites for subjective well-being are discussed, i.e., how people feel moment-to-moment and how satisfied they are with their lives.
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The temporal deployment of emotion regulation strategies during negative emotional episodes.

TL;DR: Both rumination and reappraisal interacted with time to predict negative emotional experience, highlighting the importance of accounting for timing in the study of emotion regulation, as well as the necessity of studying these temporal processes in daily life.
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The neural basis of emotions varies over time: different regions go with onset- and offset-bound processes underlying emotion intensity.

TL;DR: It was found that the neural basis of emotion intensity shifts as emotions unfold over time with emotion explosiveness and accumulation having distinctive neural correlates.
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The relation between rumination and temporal features of emotion intensity.

TL;DR: Trait and state rumination was positively associated with emotion accumulation and, to a lesser extent, with emotion explosiveness, providing support for emotion regulation theories, which hypothesise that rumination is a central mechanism underlying the maintenance of negative emotions.
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Depression severity moderates the relation between self-distancing and features of emotion unfolding

TL;DR: This paper examined the effect of self-distancing on emotion explosiveness and accumulation in participants differing in levels of depression and found that both of them decreased when participants adopted a self-immersed perspective.