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The regulation of induced depression during a frustrating situation: benefits of expressive suppression in Chinese individuals

Studies from European-American cultures consistently reported that expressive suppression was associated with worse emotional consequence (e.g. depression) in comparison with acceptance. However, this conclusion may not apply to Chinese, as suppressing emotional displays to maintain relational harmo...

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Published in:PloS one 2014-05, Vol.9 (5), p.e97420-e97420
Main Authors: Yuan, Jiajin, Liu, Yingying, Ding, Nanxiang, Yang, Jiemin
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description Studies from European-American cultures consistently reported that expressive suppression was associated with worse emotional consequence (e.g. depression) in comparison with acceptance. However, this conclusion may not apply to Chinese, as suppressing emotional displays to maintain relational harmony is culturally valued in East Asian countries. Thus, the present study examined the effects of suppression and acceptance on the depressive mood induced by a frustrating task in a Chinese sample. Sixty-four subjects were randomly assigned to one of three instructions: suppression, acceptance or no-regulation during a frustrating arithmetic task. The experience of depressive emotion and skin conductance response (SCR) were recorded during pre-frustration baseline, frustration induction and post-frustration recovery phases, respectively. Compared with the control and acceptance instructions, suppression instruction was associated with decreased depressive experiences and smaller SCR activity during frustration. There were no significant differences between acceptance and control groups in both subjective depression and SCR activity during frustration. Moreover, the suppression group showed a better emotional recovery after the frustrating task, in comparison with the acceptance and control groups. Correlation analyses verified that SCR reactivity was a reliable index of experienced depression during the frustration. Expressive suppression is effective in reducing depressive experiences and depression-related physiological activity (SCR) when Chinese people are involved. By contrast, the acceptance of depressive emotion in Chinese people does not produce a similar regulation effect. These findings suggest that cultural context should be considered in understanding the emotional consequences of suppression and acceptance strategies.
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source Publicly Available Content Database; PubMed Central; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Acceptance
Adult
Analysis
Anger
Anxiety
Asian Americans
Asian Continental Ancestry Group - psychology
Asian cultural groups
Behavior
Biology and Life Sciences
Cognition & reasoning
Conductance
Control
Correlation analysis
Cultural factors
Cultural values
Culture
Depression (Mood disorder)
Depression - psychology
Education
Emotions
Emotions - physiology
Frustration
Heart rate
Humans
Internal-External Control
Laboratories
Laws, regulations and rules
Mathematics
Mental depression
Mood
Pain
Personality
Physiology
Psychology
Recovery
Regulation
Resistance
Skin conductance response
Social Distance
Social Sciences
Sociocultural factors
Studies
Teaching
Young Adult
title The regulation of induced depression during a frustrating situation: benefits of expressive suppression in Chinese individuals
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