| Literature DB >> 27833582 |
Xinmei Deng1, Xuechen Ding2, Chen Cheng3, Hiu Mei Chou3.
Abstract
Sometimes people experience pleasant and unpleasant emotions at the same time in a single emotional event. Previous cross-cultural studies indicated that such mixed emotions are more prevalent in China and related to the attitudes toward happiness and individual's regulatory motivation. However, China is a multi-ethnic country and not much is known about subcultural differences in mixed emotions. The aim of this study was to examine the role that implicit attitudes toward happiness and regulatory motivation played in regard of the subcultural differences in mixed emotions between Han (N = 61) and Mongolian Chinese (N = 46). Results indicated that, compared with Mongolian Chinese, Han Chinese showed stronger associations between implicit contra-hedonic attitudes toward happiness and mixed emotions during pleasant emotional events. Also, Han Chinese who reported contra-hedonic motivation during pleasant emotional events had higher levels of mixed emotions than those who had hedonic motivation. No significant differences were found in terms of mixed emotions between Mongolian Chinese who had contra-hedonic and hedonic motivation. These results suggest that the psychological mechanisms underlying differences in mixed emotions also require a more comprehensive understanding from a subcultural perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Implicit Association Test (IAT); implicit attitudes toward happiness; mixed emotions; regulatory motivation; subcultural differences
Year: 2016 PMID: 27833582 PMCID: PMC5081370 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Items used in the Single Category Implicit Association Test (SC-IAT).
| Happiness | Positive | Negative |
|---|---|---|
| Happiness | Luck | Poison |
| Joy | Beauty | Violence |
| Bliss | Gift | Sickness |
| Cheerfulness | Health | Failure |
| Merriment | Wisdom | Stench |
| Delight | Success | Stupidity |
Basic information and differences comparisons about the happiness SC-IAT between two ethnic groups.
| Han Chinese ( | Mongolian Chinese ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PC | 20 | 925.71 (251.04) | 772.77 (189.71) | 3.51∗∗∗, 0.65 |
| TC | 40 | 801.77 (186.50) | 712.17 (120.62) | 2.87∗∗∗, 0.53 |
| PI | 20 | 643.97 (168.58) | 611.14 (133.73) | 1.11, 0.21 |
| TI | 40 | 591.33 (116.96) | 607.21 (121.45) | -0.71, -0.13 |
| PB | 470.68 (254.57) | 382.01 (171.16) | 2.06∗, 0.38 | |
| TB | 363.73 (192.22) | 346.77 (83.70) | 0.56, 0.10 | |
Summary of regression analyses for ethnic group and attitudes toward happiness predicting mixed emotions.
| Outcome: Mixed emotions | β | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Predictors | ||||
| Ethnic Group | -0.22∗ | -2.48 | 0.11 | 4.78∗∗ |
| Attitudes Toward Happiness | -0.18† | 1.94 | ||
| Ethnic Group x Attitudes toward Happiness | 0.43∗ | 2.00 |
Summary of regression analyses for ethnic group and regulatory motivation predicting mixed emotions.
| Outcome: Mixed emotions | β | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Predictors | ||||
| Ethnic group | -0.64∗ | -2.16 | 0.07 | 2.57† |
| Regulatory motivation | -0.27∗ | -2.13 | ||
| Ethnic group x regulatory motivation | 0.53† | 1.71 |