“…A number of studies in Western cultures reported that mothers' supportive reactions to child distress (e.g., being responsive to children's distress and encouraging the child's emotion expression) fostered children's effortful control and emotion regulation (Davidov & Grusec, 2006;von Suchodoletz, Trommsdorff, & Heikamp, 2011), whereas mothers' unsupportive reactions (e.g., responding punitively to children's distress) were associated with children's poor ability to regulate emotion (Eisenberg, Fabes, & Murphy, 1996;Fabes, Leonard, Kupanoff, & Martin, 2001). Studies in Asian contexts also reported that mothers' supportive reactions were related to successful emotion regulation in general, whereas mothers' unsupportive reactions were associated with dysregulated emotion and problem behaviors in Korea and China (Park, Lee, & Bae, 2011;Tao, Zhou, & Wang, 2010). However, the effects of unsupportive reactions on child emotional functioning seem less consistent.…”