Child and Family Emotional Functioning: A Cross-National Examination of Families from China and the United States

Scant research has examined links between particular emotion socialization processes and child emotion functioning cross-nationally. In this study, we assessed a sample of 55 families from the United States (U.S.; 28 boys and 27 girls) and 49 families from China (27 boys and 22 girls) on family emot...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of child and family studies 2014-11, Vol.23 (8), p.1444-1454
Hauptverfasser: Suveg, Cynthia, Raley, James N., Morelen, Diana, Wang, Wei, Han, Rachel Z., Campion, Scott
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container_end_page 1454
container_issue 8
container_start_page 1444
container_title Journal of child and family studies
container_volume 23
creator Suveg, Cynthia
Raley, James N.
Morelen, Diana
Wang, Wei
Han, Rachel Z.
Campion, Scott
description Scant research has examined links between particular emotion socialization processes and child emotion functioning cross-nationally. In this study, we assessed a sample of 55 families from the United States (U.S.; 28 boys and 27 girls) and 49 families from China (27 boys and 22 girls) on family emotional expressiveness and children’s emotional experiences and regulation. Results indicated that children and families from the U.S. reported greater emotional expressiveness than their Chinese counterparts. Children from the U.S. also reported greater undercontrolled emotion than Chinese youth. Family expression of positive emotion was related to effortful emotion regulation in U.S. youth only, whereas family expression of negative emotion was associated with undercontrolled emotion for both U.S. and Chinese children. Our findings advance context-specific models of emotional development by illustrating similarities and differences in emotional functioning among U.S. and Chinese families. From a clinical perspective, the findings suggest that practitioners should consider the cultural variations of emotion communication within families when conducting both assessment and therapy.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); EBSCOhost Education Source; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Behavioral Science and Psychology
Child and School Psychology
Child Rearing
Children
China
Collectivism
Communication
Cross cultural studies
Cultural Context
Cultural Differences
Emotional Development
Emotional Experience
Emotional Intelligence
Emotions
Ethnicity
Families & family life
Family
Family (Sociological Unit)
Meta Analysis
Mothers
Original Paper
Parenting Styles
Parents
Peoples Republic of China
Preschool Children
Psychology
Resistance (Psychology)
Self Control
Social Sciences
Socialization
Sociology
U.S.A
United States of America
Youth
title Child and Family Emotional Functioning: A Cross-National Examination of Families from China and the United States
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