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**How does the effectiveness of pain regulation strategies (acceptance, reappraisal and distraction) vary across pain stimulation of different duration?** Valentina Haspert^1 , Paul Pauli^1, ^3 , Matthias J. Wieser^1,2 , Philipp Reicherts^1 ^1 Department of Psychology, University of Würzburg ^2 Erasmus School of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Erasmus University Rotterdam^ 3 Center of Mental Health, University of Würzburg The emotion regulation strategies acceptance, reappraisal and distraction were found to reduce pain perception, but the influence of factors moderating the effectiveness of the different strategies is only poorly understood. A crucial aspect might be the length of the pain stimulus, which might lead to differences across strategies. To this end, we assigned 123 participants to one of three groups (acceptance, distraction, reappraisal) and instructed them to regulate brief (10s) and tonic (3min) heat pain stimuli employing the respective strategy or to use no strategy (control condition). In addition to pain intensity and unpleasantness ratings, heart rate (HR) and skin conductance (SC) were recorded. Analysis of brief pain stimuli showed significantly decreased pain ratings for regulation trials irrespective of the experimental group. However, reduction of pain intensity was more pronounced for distraction and reappraisal compared to acceptance. Similarly, SC was reduced during regulation relative to control trials in all groups, while HR showed no significant differences. Analysis of tonic pain revealed significantly lower pain ratings for regulation compared to control trials in all groups, however, no differences were found in SC and HR. In conclusion, all three strategies were effective in reducing both brief and prolonged pain stimuli. While acceptance was less effective than distraction and reappraisal for the regulation of brief pain stimuli, acceptance was similarly successful for tonic pain stimuli. Future research should further test the effectivity of regulation strategies by using a wider range of pain modalities and stimulation durations.
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