尤卡泰克玛雅儿童应对情感挑战

IF 2.1 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY
Shannon M. Brady, Laura A. Shneidman, Cornelio Azarias Chay Cano, Elizabeth L. Davis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

虽然情感科学领域对文化在情感中的作用越来越感兴趣,也有越来越多的研究表明文化在情感中的作用,但之前的研究主要集中在西方国家、英语国家、工业化国家和/或经济发达国家。尤卡坦玛雅儿童是居住在墨西哥尤卡坦半岛偏远地区小规模社区的土著居民。我们收集了 42 名 6 岁和 10 岁尤卡泰克儿童的数据,他们分别完成了静态基线和结构化失望礼物任务。孩子们被问及特定的情绪是表现出来好还是隐藏起来好,并自我报告了他们离散的积极和消极情绪体验的强度。我们观察了孩子们在完成失望礼物任务期间和之后的积极和消极情绪表达行为,并对其进行了编码,同时还持续采集了自律神经系统功能的生理指标。这些多方法的情绪反应指标使我们能够对儿童可观察和不可观察的情绪体验进行细致入微的描述。研究结果普遍表明,正如所预测的那样,儿童对文化展示规则(即压抑负面情绪但公开展示正面情绪)的理解和遵守体现在各种情绪指数上。当前的研究是朝着情感科学的未来迈出的一步,情感科学的未来在于追求研究样本更多样化和更公平的代表性,更多地使用并行的多方法研究情感,以及更多地探索情感过程是如何发展的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Yucatec Maya Children’s Responding to Emotional Challenge

While the field of affective science has seen increased interest in and representation of the role of culture in emotion, prior research has disproportionately centered on Western, English-speaking, industrialized, and/or economically developed nations. We investigated the extent to which emotional experiences and responding may be shaped by cultural display rule understanding among Yucatec Maya children, an indigenous population residing in small-scale communities in remote areas of Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula. Data were collected from forty-two 6- and 10-year-old Yucatec children who completed a resting baseline and a structured disappointing gift task. Children were asked about whether specific emotions are better to show or to hide from others and self-reported the intensity of their discrete positive and negative emotional experiences. We observed and coded expressive positive and negative affective behavior during and after the disappointing gift task, and continuously acquired physiological measures of autonomic nervous system function. These multi-method indices of emotional responding enable us to provide a nuanced description of children’s observable and unobservable affective experiences. Results generally indicated that children’s understanding of and adherence to cultural display rules (i.e., to suppress negative emotions but openly show positive ones) was evidenced across indices of emotion, as predicted. The current study is a step toward the future of affective science, which lies in the pursuit of more diverse and equitable representation in study samples, increased use of concurrent multimethod approaches to studying emotion, and increased exploration of how emotional processes develop.

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