Publications by authors named "Y E Chentsova-Dutton"

Article Synopsis
  • Emotion regulation is important for healthy psychological outcomes, but motivation to manage unpleasant emotions varies by country.
  • Studies during the COVID-19 pandemic showed that people from different countries, specifically East Asian and Western nations, have different levels of motivation to decrease unpleasant emotions, with Japan showing the least motivation and the U.S. the most.
  • The findings indicate that lower motivation to reduce unpleasant emotions is linked to less use of emotion regulation strategies, highlighting cultural differences in how emotions are managed.
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Emotion regulation is important for psychological health and can be achieved by implementing various strategies. How one regulates emotions is critical for maximizing psychological health. Few studies, however, tested the psychological correlates of different emotion regulation strategies across multiple cultures.

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Research on cultural variation in emotion values and beliefs has usually explained this variation in terms of individualism and collectivism, typically comparing European American against East Asian cultural contexts. This study examined emotion model variability across as well as within cultural contexts in a large sample of young adults of Latino heritage along with people of European and East Asian heritage. Using latent class analysis, we characterized and predicted endorsement of emotion models, distinguishing emotion ideals (the emotions one desires) from beliefs about injunctive norms for emotion (the emotions one believes are appropriate).

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The U.S. and Russian cultural contexts are thought to foster different models of emotion, with the former emphasizing positive emotions more and negative emotions less than the latter.

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