2012
DOI: 10.1177/0022022112453314
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Ethnic Variation in Emotion Regulation

Abstract: Emotion regulation (ER) via cognitive reappraisal has been shown to be superior to the use of expressive suppression regarding several aspects of mental well-being. However, a cultural perspective suggests that the consequences of emotional suppression may be moderated by cultural values. In order to examine whether this also applies to clinical samples, we investigated healthy and depressed German women and healthy and depressed Turkish immigrants living in Germany. Groups were compared in terms of frequency … Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, based on the results of the Wald test and modification indices, we created a new model with a path from reappraisal to suppression strategies. We considered the path from reappraisal to suppression as valid because (a) a balance between appraisal and suppression is important for emotion regulation (Arens, Balkir, & Barnow, 2013), and (b) reappraisal is a strategy that people implement before their emotions are fully generated and suppression is a strategy to inhibit the expression of generated emotions (Gross & John, 2003).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Therefore, based on the results of the Wald test and modification indices, we created a new model with a path from reappraisal to suppression strategies. We considered the path from reappraisal to suppression as valid because (a) a balance between appraisal and suppression is important for emotion regulation (Arens, Balkir, & Barnow, 2013), and (b) reappraisal is a strategy that people implement before their emotions are fully generated and suppression is a strategy to inhibit the expression of generated emotions (Gross & John, 2003).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our findings regarding suppression were different from previous studies. The use of emotion-regulation strategies differs by ethnic group (Arens et al, 2013; Consedine, Magai, & Horton, 2005; Flynn, Hollenstein, & Mackey, 2010) and culture (Kwon et al, 2013; Turliuc & Bujor, 2013). The emotion-regulation strategies that people value differ between cultures that place importance on protecting and promoting the pursuit of individual happiness and those that place value on social order and human relationships (Matsumoto et al, 2008).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since both organizational dehumanization and surface acting involve a relationship of authority between the organization and its employee, power distance, which implies precisely power and authority values, seems to be the most relevant cultural value to consider in this research. In doing so, it contributes to the literature on emotional labor which has focused primarily on the cultural value of individualism-collectivism to explain differences in emotional labor experiences (e.g., Allen et al, 2014;Grandey & Gabriel, 2015;Luo et al, 2019;Mastracci & Adams, 2019;Nixon et al, 2020) at the expense of power distance, that is also highly relevant in contexts of emotional labor (e.g., Arens et al, 2013). Practically, we explored cross-cultural differences by relying on two samples of employees from Vietnam and the United Kingdom (UK), two countries that are assumed to differ in terms of power distance (Hofstede et al, 2010).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A growing body of research suggests that widespread variation in numerous psychological domains, including visual cognition [1,2], emotion regulation [3,4,5,6], the self-concept [7,8], psychological biases [9*,10], and social [11,12,13*,14,15,16] and attractiveness preferences [17,18*] exists cross-culturally (for reviews, [19,20,21]). These findings have challenged the generalizability of Western samples and have underscored the need for cross-cultural comparisons.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%