TY - JOUR
T1 - Emotion Regulation Strategies and Psychological Health Across Cultures
AU - Tamir, Maya
AU - Ito, Atsuki
AU - Miyamoto, Yuri
AU - Chentsova-Dutton, Yulia
AU - Choi, Jeong Ha
AU - Cieciuch, Jan
AU - Riediger, Michaela
AU - Rauers, Antje
AU - Padun, Maria
AU - Kim, Min Young
AU - Solak, Nevin
AU - Qiu, Jiang
AU - Wang, Xiaoqin
AU - Alvarez-Risco, Aldo
AU - Hanoch, Yaniv
AU - Uchida, Yukiko
AU - Torres, Claudio
AU - Nascimento, Thiago Gomes
AU - Jahanshahi, Asghar Afshar
AU - Singh, Rakesh
AU - Kamble, Shanmukh V.
AU - An, Sieun
AU - Dzokoto, Vivian
AU - Anum, Adote
AU - Singh, Babita
AU - Castelnuovo, Gianluca
AU - Pietrabissa, Giada
AU - Huerta-Carvajal, María Isabel
AU - Galindo-Bello, Erika
AU - Ibarra, Verónica Janneth García
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Psychological Association
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - 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. In a preregistered cross-cultural study (N = 3,960, 19 countries), conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic, we assessed associations between the use of seven emotion regulation strategies (situation selection, distraction, rumination, cognitive reappraisal, acceptance, expressive suppression, and emotional support seeking) and four indices of psychological health (life satisfaction, depressive symptoms, perceived stress, and loneliness). Model comparisons based on Bayesian information criteria provided support for cultural differences in 36% of associations, with very strong support for differences in 18% of associations. Strategies that were linked to worse psychological health in individualist countries (e.g., rumination, expressive suppression) were unrelated or linked to better psychological health in collectivist countries. Cultural differences in associations with psychological health were most prominent for expressive suppression and rumination and also found for distraction and acceptance. In addition, we found evidence for cultural similarities in 46% of associations between strategies and psychological health, but none of this evidence was very strong. Cultural similarities were most prominent in associations of psychological health with emotional support seeking. These findings highlight the importance of considering the cultural context to understand how individuals from diverse backgrounds manage unpleasant emotions.
AB - 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. In a preregistered cross-cultural study (N = 3,960, 19 countries), conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic, we assessed associations between the use of seven emotion regulation strategies (situation selection, distraction, rumination, cognitive reappraisal, acceptance, expressive suppression, and emotional support seeking) and four indices of psychological health (life satisfaction, depressive symptoms, perceived stress, and loneliness). Model comparisons based on Bayesian information criteria provided support for cultural differences in 36% of associations, with very strong support for differences in 18% of associations. Strategies that were linked to worse psychological health in individualist countries (e.g., rumination, expressive suppression) were unrelated or linked to better psychological health in collectivist countries. Cultural differences in associations with psychological health were most prominent for expressive suppression and rumination and also found for distraction and acceptance. In addition, we found evidence for cultural similarities in 46% of associations between strategies and psychological health, but none of this evidence was very strong. Cultural similarities were most prominent in associations of psychological health with emotional support seeking. These findings highlight the importance of considering the cultural context to understand how individuals from diverse backgrounds manage unpleasant emotions.
KW - culture
KW - depression
KW - emotion
KW - emotion regulation
KW - well-being
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85183428509&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1037/amp0001237
DO - 10.1037/amp0001237
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85183428509
SN - 0003-066X
JO - American Psychologist
JF - American Psychologist
ER -