Relationship Between Mathematics Anxiety and Use of Emotion Regulation Strategies in Young Adults
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Abstract
Mathematics anxiety, the debilitating emotional reaction to mathematics, involving a feeling of
nervousness, can have harmful effects for mathematics achievement in students. Though there is
an upsurge of interest in emotion regulation research, the way the emotion regulation functions
in relation to specific emotions remains unelaborated. The present study focuses on the
relationship between mathematic anxiety and the use of emotion regulation strategies in young
adults. A sample of 160 student volunteers (80 males and 80 females) of the age range 18-25 yrs
participated in this study. It was hypothesized that females show high mathematics anxiety as
compared to males. In addition to this it was also predicted that high math anxiety individuals
use more of expressive suppression and low math anxiety individuals use more of cognitive
reappraisal emotion regulation. Gender differences in emotion regulation were also investigated.
The findings of the studies confirmed all the hypotheses posited except the first one where no
difference between males and females in mathematic anxiety was observed. High math anxiety
group used expressive suppression and low math anxiety group used cognitive reappraisal
emotion regulation. And also males used more of cognitive reappraisal and females used more of
expressive suppression emotion regulation.
