| Literature DB >> 30067736 |
Paula M Niedenthal1, Magdalena Rychlowska2, Adrienne Wood1, Fangyun Zhao1.
Abstract
Recent findings demonstrate that heterogeneity of long-history migration predicts present-day emotion behaviors and norms. Residents of countries characterized by high ancestral diversity display emotion expressions that are easier to decode by observers, endorse norms of higher emotion expressivity, and smile more in response to certain stimuli than residents of countries that lack ancestral diversity. We build on the extant findings and investigate historical heterogeneity as a predictor of daily smiling, laughter, and positive emotion across the world's countries and the states of the United States. Study 1 finds that historical heterogeneity is positively associated with self-reports of smiling, laughter, and positive emotions in the Gallup World Poll when controlling for GDP and present-day population diversity. Study 2 extends the findings to effects of long-history migration within the United States. We estimated the average percentage of foreign-born citizens in each state between 1850 and 2010 based on US Census information as an indicator of historical heterogeneity. Consistent with the world findings of Study 1, historical heterogeneity predicted smiling, laughter, and positive, but not negative, emotion. The relationships remained significant when controlling for per capita income and present-day population diversity of each state. Together, the findings further demonstrate the important role of long-history migration in shaping emotion cultures of countries and states, which persist beyond the original socio-ecological conditions, and open promising avenues for cross-cultural research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30067736 PMCID: PMC6070166 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The number of source countries to the countries of the world since A.D. 1500.
Darker colors indicate greater number of source countries. From Putterman and Weil [37] World Migration Matrix.
Correlations between variables in Study 1.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Heterogeneity | |||||||||||||
| 2. Smiling and Laughter | |||||||||||||
| 3. Enjoyment | |||||||||||||
| 4. Positive Experience Index | |||||||||||||
| 5. Happiness | .25 | ||||||||||||
| 6. Positive Emotion | .28 | ||||||||||||
| 7. Anger | -.03 | ||||||||||||
| 8. Sadness | -.04 | -.13 | -.18 | .20 | |||||||||
| 9. Stress | .15 | .15 | -.06 | .07 | -.07 | .03 | |||||||
| 10. Worry | .05 | -.11 | -.23 | .23 | |||||||||
| 11. Negative Experience Index | -.02 | -.10 | .16 | ||||||||||
| 12. Negative Emotion | -.19 | -.15 | -.18 | -.13 | .34 | .01 | .24 | .27 | .17 | ||||
| 13. GDP per Capita | .18 | -.11 | -.003 | .04 | |||||||||
| 14. Ethnic Fractionalization | -.01 | .01 | -.10 | .02 | -.01 |
Note. Correlations in bold are significant, with
* denoting p < .05
** denoting p < .01, and
*** denoting p < .001.
Fig 2Smiling and laughter as a function of country-level historical heterogeneity (log-transformed units).
Fig 3Average percent foreign born populations of the states of the continental United States.
Based on censuses from 1850 (or between 1860 and 1890 for later-entry states) until 2010. Darker colors indicate higher percent foreign born populations.
Correlations between variables in Study 2.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Heterogeneity | |||||||||
| 2. Smiling and Laughter | |||||||||
| 3. Enjoyment | |||||||||
| 4. Happiness | |||||||||
| 5. Anger | -.23 | ||||||||
| 6. Sadness | |||||||||
| 7. Stress | .09 | -.19 | -.13 | -.07 | .23 | .33 | |||
| 8. Worry | -.01 | ||||||||
| 9. Income per capita | .16 | .09 | -.01 | -.17 | .17 | .23 | |||
| 10. Source countries in 2016 | .01 | -.10 | .09 | .19 | .16 |
Note. Correlations in bold are significant, with
* denoting p < .05
** denoting p < .01, and
*** denoting p < .001.
Fig 4Smiling and laughter as a function of state-level historical heterogeneity.