Cross-cultural differences in supportive responses to positive event disclosure
Perceived reactions to sharing of good news (capitalization), can have important implications for romantic relationships. Typically, when European Americans perceive that their partners respond in an active constructive (versus passive and/or destructive,) manner, they tend to perceive their partner...
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-49972024-08-21T03:21:29Z Cross-cultural differences in supportive responses to positive event disclosure SIM, Lester IP, Ka I. ASCIGIL, Esra EDELSTEIN, Robin S. Perceived reactions to sharing of good news (capitalization), can have important implications for romantic relationships. Typically, when European Americans perceive that their partners respond in an active constructive (versus passive and/or destructive,) manner, they tend to perceive their partners as more responsive and report higher relationship quality. However, cross-cultural differences in norms can influence peoples’ preference for different capitalization responses and whether different capitalization responses convey partner responsiveness. In a combined sample of European Americans, East, and South Asians (N = 915), we investigated whether links among capitalization responses, perceived partner responsiveness, and relationship quality differed by culture. People who perceived active constructive and passive destructive responses reported higher and lower levels of partner responsiveness and relationship satisfaction, respectively. Further, European Americans who perceived active destructive, and European Americans and East Asians who perceived passive constructive, responses, reported less partners responsiveness and relationship satisfaction. South Asians who perceived passive constructive responses reported greater partner responsiveness and relationship satisfaction. East and South Asians who perceived active destructive responses did not differ in relationship satisfaction. Our findings provide a cross-cultural perspective on the study of romantic couples’ positive event disclosure and expand capitalization research to an understudied sample of South Asians. 2024-03-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3739 info:doi/10.1080/17439760.2023.2169629 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4997/viewcontent/CCCapitalization_sv.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Perceived responses to capitalization attempts close relationships cross-cultural good news sharing Applied Behavior Analysis Asian Studies Social Psychology |
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Perceived responses to capitalization attempts close relationships cross-cultural good news sharing Applied Behavior Analysis Asian Studies Social Psychology SIM, Lester IP, Ka I. ASCIGIL, Esra EDELSTEIN, Robin S. Cross-cultural differences in supportive responses to positive event disclosure |
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Perceived reactions to sharing of good news (capitalization), can have important implications for romantic relationships. Typically, when European Americans perceive that their partners respond in an active constructive (versus passive and/or destructive,) manner, they tend to perceive their partners as more responsive and report higher relationship quality. However, cross-cultural differences in norms can influence peoples’ preference for different capitalization responses and whether different capitalization responses convey partner responsiveness. In a combined sample of European Americans, East, and South Asians (N = 915), we investigated whether links among capitalization responses, perceived partner responsiveness, and relationship quality differed by culture. People who perceived active constructive and passive destructive responses reported higher and lower levels of partner responsiveness and relationship satisfaction, respectively. Further, European Americans who perceived active destructive, and European Americans and East Asians who perceived passive constructive, responses, reported less partners responsiveness and relationship satisfaction. South Asians who perceived passive constructive responses reported greater partner responsiveness and relationship satisfaction. East and South Asians who perceived active destructive responses did not differ in relationship satisfaction. Our findings provide a cross-cultural perspective on the study of romantic couples’ positive event disclosure and expand capitalization research to an understudied sample of South Asians. |
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SIM, Lester IP, Ka I. ASCIGIL, Esra EDELSTEIN, Robin S. |
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SIM, Lester IP, Ka I. ASCIGIL, Esra EDELSTEIN, Robin S. |
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SIM, Lester |
title |
Cross-cultural differences in supportive responses to positive event disclosure |
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Cross-cultural differences in supportive responses to positive event disclosure |
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Cross-cultural differences in supportive responses to positive event disclosure |
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Cross-cultural differences in supportive responses to positive event disclosure |
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Cross-cultural differences in supportive responses to positive event disclosure |
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cross-cultural differences in supportive responses to positive event disclosure |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2024 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3739 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4997/viewcontent/CCCapitalization_sv.pdf |
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