Volume 27, Issue 6 pp. 804-813
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Relationships between emotional processing difficulties and early maladaptive schemas on the regulation of psychological needs

Bruno Faustino

Corresponding Author

Bruno Faustino

Faculty of Psychology, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal

Correspondence

Bruno Faustino, Faculty of Psychology, University of Lisbon, Alameda da Universidade, Lisbon, Portugal.

Email: [email protected]

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António Branco Vasco

António Branco Vasco

Faculty of Psychology, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal

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First published: 08 June 2020
Citations: 23

Abstract

Emotional processing difficulties may be viewed as dysfunctional emotional states emerging from non-adequately processed emotional experience while early maladaptive schemas are experienced-based dysfunctional mental structures associated with chronic and recurrent psychological disorders. Schemas and emotional difficulties were previously associated with impairments on the regulation of psychological needs. However, clarifications about the relationships between these constructs are lacking. In a cross-sectional study, a clinical sample of 66 participants (M = 46.4, SD = 13.1) completed self-report questionnaires. Emotional processing difficulties correlated positively with schemas and negatively with the regulation of psychological needs. Disconnection and rejection, lack of autonomy and impaired limits schema domains mediated the relationship between emotional processing difficulties and psychological needs. Emotional processing difficulties may be associated with impairments on the regulation of psychological needs, due to activation of early maladaptive schemas, which, in turn, prompts symptomatology. Transtheoretical intervention regarding marker-guided interventions and phase-by-phase schema restructuring may be used to promote the regulation of psychological needs.

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