非裔美国大学生情境情感表达

IF 2.1 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY
Affective science Pub Date : 2025-01-30 eCollection Date: 2025-06-01 DOI:10.1007/s42761-024-00286-6
Deon W Brown, Fantasy T Lozada, Zewelanji N Serpell, Vivian A Dzokoto, Julie C Dunsmore
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究旨在探讨非裔美国大学生在家庭和大学校园环境中自我报告的情绪表达模式,以及这些模式与大学校园环境特征(即大学整体的种族人口统计、学生的朋友群体和种族歧视经历)的联系。理论支持包括三重困境理论和情感发展模型。在线调查数据来自169名自认为是非裔美国大学生(62.4%为女性;(年龄= 20.60岁),对三所大学校园的情绪表达与家庭成员和校园情绪表达的报告进行了比较。此外,通过潜在特征分析(LPA)对家庭和校园情绪表达报告进行分析,以确定情绪表达的潜在特征及其预测因子。在家庭和大学校园环境中出现了四种情绪表达特征:积极的低表达者(n = 55;32%),高家庭-低校园表现者(n = 44;26%),一致表达者(n = 37;22%)和低家族阳性-一致阴性表达(n = 33;20%)。大学校园类型不具有显著的预测因子。然而,校园种族歧视经历和朋友群体的种族构成是显著的预测因子。非裔美国大学生在家庭领域与公共领域(即大学校园)的情感表达差异可能反映了其种族经历的差异。这些发现对基于上下文的非裔美国人情感能力的理解具有广泛的意义,并且大学有必要考虑校园经历如何塑造非裔美国大学生的情感功能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
African American College Students' Contextual Emotion Expression.

The current study aimed to explore patterns of self-reported emotion expression across familial and college campus contexts among African American college students and the associations of these patterns with contextual features on college campuses (i.e., racial demographics of the university overall and students' friend group and racial discrimination experiences). Theoretical support included Triple Quandary Theory and emotional development models. Online survey data from 169 self-identified African American college students (62.4% female; M age = 20.60) across three college campuses were analyzed to compare reports of emotion expression with family members and emotion expression on campus. Additionally, family and campus emotion expression reports were analyzed via latent profile analysis (LPA) to identify latent profiles of emotion expression and their predictors. Four profiles of emotion expression across familial and college campus contexts emerged: Positive Low Expressors (n = 55; 32%), High Family - Low Campus Expressors (n = 44; 26%), Consistent Expressors (n = 37; 22%), and Low Family Positive - Consistent Negative Expressors (n = 33; 20%). College campus type was not a significant predictor of profile membership. However, campus experiences of racial discrimination and racial composition of friend group were significant predictors. African American college students' varying emotion expression in familial domains relative to public domains (i.e., college campuses) may reflect variation in their racial experiences. These findings have implications for a contextual based understanding of African Americans' emotional competence, broadly, and the necessity for colleges to consider how campus experiences shape African American college students' emotional functioning.

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4.40
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