ISSN 1671-3710
CN 11-4766/R
主办:中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理科学进展 ›› 2025, Vol. 33 ›› Issue (12): 2182-2195.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1042.2025.2182 cstr: 32111.14.2025.2182

• 研究前沿 • 上一篇    下一篇

后悔情绪及其调节

靳帅1,#, 刘思佳2,3,#, 李爽4, 刘志远1(), 郭秀艳2,3   

  1. 1陕西师范大学心理学院, 西安 710062
    2复旦大学老龄研究院, 上海 200433
    3复旦大学国家发展与智能治理综合实验室, 上海 200433
    4南京林业大学马克思主义学院, 南京 210037
  • 收稿日期:2024-11-23 出版日期:2025-12-15 发布日期:2025-10-27
  • 通讯作者: 刘志远, E-mail: zyliu@snnu.edu.cn
  • 作者简介:

    #共同第一作者

  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金项目(32371122);国家社会科学基金项目(23FSHB012);陕西省杰出青年科学基金项目(2025JC-JCQN-060);中央高校基本科研业务费(GK202301004);教育部哲学社会科学研究重大课题攻关项目(22JZD044)

Regret and its regulation

JIN Shuai1,#, LIU Sijia2,3,#, LI Shuang4, LIU Zhiyuan1(), GUO Xiuyan2,3   

  1. 1School of Psychology, Shaanxi Normal University, Xi’an 710062, China
    2Fudan Institute on Ageing, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China
    3MOE Laboratory for National Development and Intelligent Governance, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China
    4School of Marxism, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing 210037, China
  • Received:2024-11-23 Online:2025-12-15 Published:2025-10-27

摘要:

当决策失误而错失良机时, 人们往往体验到后悔情绪。长期沉浸在后悔情绪中不仅损害心理健康, 还会使决策产生偏差。因此, 后悔情绪及其调节受到了研究者们的普遍关注。研究者们常常在实验室情境下利用任务范式对后悔情绪进行诱发, 基于决策行为、主观感受等行为学指标构建后悔情绪的认知理论, 基于脑活动、脑功能连接等神经指标探讨后悔情绪的神经机制。针对行为指标与神经指标的测量进一步证实了认知重评、注意分配、事前预期等认知调节方法与tDCS、TMS等神经调控技术在缓解后悔情绪上的有效性。未来研究可以从日常生活中后悔情绪的测量与调节、后悔情绪调节的神经振荡机制等方面进行深入探索, 在厘清后悔情绪神经机制基础上施加个性化的神经调控方法, 从而对心理健康维护和降低决策偏差等提供启示和借鉴。

关键词: 后悔情绪, 后悔调节, 神经机制, 神经调控

Abstract:

As a negative, painful, and self-blaming emotion, regret arises from upward counterfactual thinking—the belief that a better outcome could have been achieved had a different choice been made. Regret is detrimental to mental health and serves as a significant risk factor for the onset of mental health disorders, such as depression. Furthermore, individuals who experience regret often exhibit a tendency toward regret aversion, which can lead to biased decision-making. Given its broad implications, research on regret is crucial for understanding how to promote mental well-being and mitigate decision-making biases. Consequently, this area of research has garnered extensive attention from scholars across various disciplines, including psychology, management, economics, and artificial intelligence.

Previous studies have employed tasks such as the wheel of fortune task, the devil task, the perceptual decision task, and the electric shock decision task to induce regret. These paradigms typically present participants with multiple options differing in reward or punishment, which elicits counterfactual thinking and subsequent regret. The action effect of regret, the temporal pattern of the experience of regret, and decision justification theory collectively provide a theoretical framework for understanding the factors influencing regret. Expanding on this foundation, the theory of regret regulation proposes strategies for mitigating regret. Furthermore, research has demonstrated that regret involves multiple cognitive and affective processes, including value assessment, reward processing, cognitive control, and emotional expression. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have implicated several brain regions in regret processing, such as the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), ventral striatum, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), amygdala, and insula, as well as fronto-striatal functional connectivity, suggesting that these areas may constitute a neural circuit for regret. Additionally, electroencephalography (EEG) studies have identified feedback-related negativity (FRN), associated with outcome evaluation, and the P300, linked to emotional salience, as neural correlates of regret processing.

Regret is highly sensitive to situational factors, including perceived responsibility, social comparison, and adherence to advice. Research has shown that cognitive reappraisal, attentional deployment, anticipation, and neural modulation techniques can effectively mitigate regret. For instance, attentional deployment not only regulates immediate feelings of regret but also, when trained, induces lasting intervention effects that reduce subsequent regret. Prefrontal cortex and alpha oscillation play a key role in this process. Anticipation, meanwhile, enables individuals to psychologically prepare for potential poor decision outcomes, facilitating proactive regret regulation. This mechanism is linked to activation in the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC). Additionally, non-invasive neuromodulation techniques, such as transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), applied to regions like the OFC or dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) have demonstrated efficacy in modulating regret. However, empirical findings in this domain remain inconsistent.

In order to deepen and enrich this research, future studies could explore the following aspects. First, intensive longitudinal designs could be employed to examine the trajectory of regret fluctuations and the intervention effects following the implementation of regulation strategies in daily life, which would provide valuable insights for managing regret and supporting individual mental health in naturalistic settings. Second, research could investigate the characteristics of information transmission (neural oscillation transfer) between different brain regions within the regret-related neural circuits, as well as the dynamic changes in neural oscillation transfer during regret regulation, thereby contributing to a more comprehensive understanding of the neural mechanisms underlying regret and its regulation. Building on this foundation, personalized stimulation frequencies could be applied to key brain regions involved in regret processing by combining electroencephalography with rhythmic transcranial magnetic stimulation, establishing causal evidence linking neural signal modifications to regret intervention outcomes. Further exploration of these critical aspects through empirical investigation may significantly improve decision-making processes across various domains while simultaneously promoting long-term psychological health and well-being.

Key words: regret, regret regulation, neural mechanism, neural modulation

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