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Norms for experiencing emotions in different cultures: Inter- and intranational differences.
664
Citations
41
References
2001
Year
Affective VariableCultural RelationSocial PsychologyEmpathyEducationCultural FactorUnited StatesPsychologySocial SciencesEmotional ResponseCross-cultural StudyIntranational DifferencesCultural DiversityCross-cultural PsychologyCultural NormsEmotional ExpressionBetween-nations DifferencesSocial IdentityDifferent CulturesCultural SensitivityCross-cultural EthicsCultureCultural PracticesCross-cultural PerspectiveEmotionCultural Psychology
Within- and between-nations differences in norms for experiencing emotions were analyzed in a cross-cultural study with 1,846 respondents from 2 individualistic (United States, Australia) and 2 collectivistic (China, Taiwan) countries. A multigroup latent class analysis revealed that there were both universal and culture-specific types of norms for experiencing emotions. Moreover, strong intranational variability in norms for affect could be detected, particularly for collectivistic nations. Unexpectedly, individualistic nations were most uniform in norms, particularly with regard to pleasant affect. Individualistic and collectivistic nations differed most strongly in norms for self-reflective emotions (e.g., pride and guilt). Norms for emotions were related to emotional experiences within nations. Furthermore, there were strong national differences in reported emotional experiences, even when norms were held constant.
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