Title of article
EMOTIONS ACROSS CULTURES AND METHODS
Author/Authors
CHRISTIE N. SCOLLON ED DIENER، نويسنده , , Shigehiro Oishi، نويسنده , , ROBERT BISWAS-DIENER، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
23
From page
304
To page
326
Abstract
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 cultural groups and for both pleasant and unpleasant emotions, global reports of emotion predicted retrospective
recall even after controlling for reports made during the experience sampling period, suggesting that
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.
Keywords
CULTURE , Emotion , memory for emotions , Experience sampling methodology
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Record number
708176
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