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Emotion regulation of social exclusion: a cross-cultural study

Psychology

Emotion regulation of social exclusion: a cross-cultural study

Z. He, N. Muhlert, et al.

This captivating study by Zhenhong He, Nils Muhlert, and Rebecca Elliott explores how emotional reactions to social exclusion vary between individualistic and collectivistic cultures. Discover the intriguing 'own-race bias' effect and the surprising differences in emotion regulation skills. Learn how culture shapes our emotional experiences and the important implications for interventions!... show more
Abstract
Social exclusion is harmful to basic human needs. Emotion regulation represents a potential coping strategy. As culture can influence how people react and regulate their emotions, this study examined whether emotional reaction and regulation in response to social exclusion differ between individualistic and collectivistic cultures. A total of 80 college students, half White (n=40, recruited in Manchester, UK) and half East Asian (n=40, recruited in Shenzhen, China) viewed social exclusion pictures expressed by same-race or other-race characters. Both groups of participants viewed these pictures under no-reappraisal (passive viewing) and reappraisal (reinterpretation) conditions. Participants rated their vicarious negative emotional experience after each picture presentation. Results showed that both White and East Asian participants expressed greater negative emotion and showed stronger emotion regulation effects when facing own-race social exclusion, i.e., the "own-race bias". In addition, White participants were more capable of regulating the negative emotions elicited by social exclusion compared to East Asian participants. Findings highlight the importance of considering the role of culture in emotional reaction to and emotion regulation of social exclusion, which may help the development of appropriate interventions across diverse populations.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Jul 14, 2021
Authors
Zhenhong He, Nils Muhlert, Rebecca Elliott
Tags
emotional reactions
social exclusion
cultural differences
emotion regulation
own-race bias
individualistic cultures
collectivistic cultures
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