“…There may be cultural differences between Western and Eastern cultures, which may, in turn, affect the reporting of social and interpersonal pleasure in the Chinese context. Indeed, earlier findings using the TEPS (Gard et al, ), a measure of anticipatory and consummatory pleasure, suggested that there are minor cultural variations in reporting experiential pleasure (Chan et al, ; Chan, Wang, et al, ; Li et al, ). However, in a large investigation of a Chinese undergraduate sample using the Chapman Revised Social Anhedonia Scale (RSAS; Eckblad, Chapman, Chapman, & Mishlove, ), the mean scores of Chinese students were lower than those reported in a comparably sized investigation of American students (Kwapil, Ros‐Morente, Silvia, & Barrantes‐Vidal, ), though the factor structure of the Chapman Psychosis‐Proneness scales appeared consistent across the two cultures (Chan, Shi, Geng, et al, ).…”