1. Who emphasizes positivity? An exploration of emotion values in people of Latino, Asian, and European heritage living in the United States
- Author
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Belinda Campos, Nicole Senft, Michelle N. Shiota, and Yulia E. Chentsova-Dutton
- Subjects
Male ,Latin Americans ,Emotions ,05 social sciences ,Collectivism ,Negativity effect ,Hispanic or Latino ,PsycINFO ,United States ,White People ,050105 experimental psychology ,Young Adult ,Individualism ,Asian People ,Response type ,Humans ,Female ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Valence (psychology) ,Students ,Psychology ,Negative emotion ,Social psychology ,General Psychology - Abstract
Emotion values vary within and between individualistic and collectivistic cultural contexts. The form of collectivism prevalent in Latin America emphasizes simpatia, a cultural model that stresses the relational benefits of positivity but also the costs of negativity. This model was predicted to engender a pattern of emotion values distinct from that of the more commonly studied collectivist group, people of Asian heritage (PAH), among whom an emphasis on moderating positive and negative emotions is typically observed, and from people of European heritage (PEH), among whom authenticity in emotions is typically valued. College students of Latino (n = 659), Asian (n = 446), and European (n = 456) heritage living in the United States completed a study examining positive and negative emotion values. Mixed-model analysis of variance that included interactions among culture, emotion valence (positive, negative), value type (desirability, appropriateness), and response type (experience, expression) suggested distinct patterns of emotion values across groups. People of Latino heritage (PLH) rated positive emotions as more desirable and appropriate to experience and express than PAH (ps .05) compared with PAH and as similarly undesirable (ps > .05) but more inappropriate to experience (p < .001) compared with PEH. The emotion-value pattern that emerged was largely consistent with simpatia for PLH and provides new evidence of similarity and variation in emotion values in three distinct contexts. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2021