Emotions Across Cultures and Methods

Participants included 46 European American, 33 Asian American, 91 Japanese, 160 Indian, and 80 Hispanic students (N = 416). Discrete emotions, as well as pleasant and unpleasant emotions, were assessed: (a) with global self-report measures, (b) using an experience-sampling method for 1 week, and (c) by asking participants to recall their emotions from the experience sampling week. Cultural differences emerged for nearly all measures. The inclusion of indigenous emotions in India and Japan did not alter the conclusions substantially, although pride showed a pattern across cultures that differed from the other positive emotions. In all five culturalgroupsandforbothpleasantandunpleasantemotions,globalreportsof emotionpredictedretrospective recall even after controllingforreportsmadeduringthe experiencesamplingperiod,suggestingthat individuals’ general conceptions of their emotional lives influenced their memories of emotions. Cultural differences emerged in the degree to which recall of frequency of emotion was related to experience sampling reports of intensity of emotions. Despite the memory bias, the three methods led to similar conclusions about the relative position of the groups.

[1]  S. Okazaki Sources of ethnic differences between Asian American and white American college students on measures of depression and social anxiety. , 1997, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[2]  B. Mesquita,et al.  Emotions in collectivist and individualist contexts. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[3]  M. Ross Relation of Implicit Theories to the Construction of Personal Histories , 1989 .

[4]  Batja Mesquita,et al.  Different emotional lives , 2002 .

[5]  L. Levine Reconstructing memory for emotions , 1997 .

[6]  H. Triandis,et al.  The Shifting Basis of Life Satisfaction Judgments Across Cultures: Emotions Versus Norms , 1998 .

[7]  Michael D. Robinson,et al.  Episodic and semantic knowledge in emotional self-report: evidence for two judgment processes. , 2002, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[8]  D. Kahneman,et al.  Well-being : the foundations of hedonic psychology , 1999 .

[9]  S. Oishi The Experiencing and Remembering of Well-Being: A Cross-Cultural Analysis , 2002 .

[10]  Shinobu Kitayama,et al.  Culture, self, and emotion: A cultural perspective on "self-conscious" emotions. , 1995 .

[11]  S. Okazaki Asian American and White American Differences on Affective Distress Symptoms , 2000 .

[12]  D. Matsumoto Ethnic differences in affect intensity, emotion judgments, display rule attitudes, and self-reported emotional expression in an American sample , 1993 .

[13]  Robert Biswas-Diener,et al.  An experience sampling and cross-cultural investigation of the relation between pleasant and unpleasant affect , 2005 .

[14]  E. Diener,et al.  Factors predicting the subjective well-being of nations. , 1995, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[15]  Andrew Ortony,et al.  The Cognitive Structure of Emotions , 1988 .

[16]  Kurt W. Fischer,et al.  Self-conscious emotions: The psychology of shame, guilt, embarrassment, and pride. , 1995 .

[17]  H. Markus,et al.  Emotion and culture: Empirical studies of mutual influence. , 1994 .

[18]  Harry C. Triandis,et al.  Simpatia as a Cultural Script of Hispanics. , 1984 .

[19]  E. Diener,et al.  Positivity and the Construction of Life Satisfaction Judgments: Global Happiness is not the Sum of its Parts , 2000 .

[20]  Catherine A. Lutz the domain of emotion words on Ifaluk , 1982 .

[21]  Henry L. Roediger,et al.  Tricks of Memory , 2000 .

[22]  D. Kahneman,et al.  Does Living in California Make People Happy? A Focusing Illusion in Judgments of Life Satisfaction , 1998 .

[23]  R. Plutchik Emotion, a psychoevolutionary synthesis , 1980 .

[24]  D. R. Lehman,et al.  Is there a universal need for positive self-regard? , 1999, Psychological review.

[25]  E. Diener,et al.  Norms for experiencing emotions in different cultures: inter- and intranational differences. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[26]  Robert Biswas-Diener,et al.  Cross-situational consistency of affective experiences across cultures. , 2004, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[27]  L. F. Barrett The Relationships among Momentary Emotion Experiences, Personality Descriptions, and Retrospective Ratings of Emotion , 1997 .

[28]  R. Shweder,et al.  Kali's tongue: Cultural psychology and the power of shame in Orissa, India. , 1994 .

[29]  E. Diener,et al.  Making the Best of a Bad Situation: Satisfaction in the Slums of Calcutta , 2001 .

[30]  E. Diener,et al.  The personality structure of affect. , 1995 .

[31]  Eunkook M. Suh,et al.  National differences in subjective well-being. , 1999 .

[32]  H. Markus,et al.  Culture, Emotion, and Well-being: Good Feelings in Japan and the United States , 2000 .

[33]  D. Stipek Differences between Americans and Chinese in the Circumstances Evoking Pride, Shame, and Guilt , 1998 .

[34]  D. Watson,et al.  Cross-cultural convergence in the structure of mood: A Japanese replication and a comparison with U.S. findings , 1984 .

[35]  L. Farrand THE AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION. , 1897, Science.

[36]  B. Mesquita,et al.  Cultural variations in emotions: a review. , 1992, Psychological bulletin.

[37]  R. Larsen,et al.  Intensity and frequency: dimensions underlying positive and negative affect. , 1985, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[38]  Michael D. Robinson,et al.  The Gender Heuristic and the Database: Factors Affecting the Perception of Gender-Related Differences in the Experience and Display of Emotions , 1998 .

[39]  P. Shaver,et al.  Cross-cultural similarities and differences in emotion and its representation. , 1992 .

[40]  J. V. Wood,et al.  Remembering Everyday Experience Through the Prism of Self-Esteem , 2003, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[41]  Michael D. Robinson,et al.  Belief and feeling: evidence for an accessibility model of emotional self-report. , 2002, Psychological bulletin.