Follow up viewing on key concepts and research
The How of Happiness
Barbara Fredrickson on the positive ratio
Barbara Fredrickson on Positive emotions and broaden and build
Some graphics
Gallup global wellbeing index.
The Nun Study
Cross Cultural research–Reading
Within- and between-nations differences in norms for experiencing emotions were analyzed in a cross-cultural study with 1,846 respondents from 2 individualistic (United States, Australia) and 2 collectivistic (China, Taiwan) countries. A multigroup latent class analysis revealed that there were both universal and culture-specific types of norms for experiencing emotions. Moreover, strong intranational variability in norms for affect could be detected, particularly for collectivistic nations. Unexpectedly, individualistic nations were most uniform in norms, particularly with regard to pleasant affect. Individualistic and collectivistic nations differed most strongly in norms for self-reflective emotions (e.g., pride
and guilt). Norms for emotions were related to emotional experiences within nations. Furthermore, there were strong national differences in reported emotional experiences, even when norms were held constant. Sourced: Eid and Diener (2001)
Read: Chapter on Culture, Development and Happiness
Whether emotion is universal or social is a recurrent issue in the history of emotion study among psychologists. Some researchers view emotion as a universal construct, and that a large part of emotional experience is biologically based. However, emotion is not only biologically determined, but is also influenced by the environment. Therefore, cultural differences exist in some aspects of emotions, one such important aspect of emotion being emotional arousal level. All affective states are systematically represented as two bipolar dimensions, valence and arousal. Arousal level of actual and ideal emotions has consistently been found to have cross-cultural differences. In Western or individualist culture, high arousal emotions are valued and promoted more than low arousal emotions. Moreover, Westerners experience high arousal emotions more than low arousal emotions. By contrast, in Eastern or collectivist culture, low arousal emotions are valued more than high arousal emotions. Moreover, people in the East actually experience and prefer to experience low arousal emotions more than high arousal emotions. Mechanism of these cross-cultural differences and implications are also discussed. Source: Lim 2016
Read: Emotional Perceptions across Cultures
Most Emotionally Aware Countries
Country | Percentage of Country’s Population* |
Philippines | 60 |
El Salvador | 57 |
Bahrain | 56 |
Oman | 55 |
Colombia | 55 |
Chile | 54 |
Costa Rica | 54 |
Canada | 54 |
Guatemala | 54 |
Bolivia | 54 |
Ecuador | 54 |
Dominican Republic | 54 |
Peru | 54 |
Nicaragua | 54 |
United States | 54 |
*Percentage of the country’s population who said they had experienced the full range of positive and negative emotions on the previous day.
Least Emotionally Aware Countries
Country | Percentage of Country’s Population* |
Singapore | 36 |
Georgia | 37 |
Lithuania | 37 |
Russia | 38 |
Madagascar | 38 |
Ukraine | 38 |
Belarus | 38 |
Kazakhstan | 38 |
Nepal | 38 |
Kyrgyzstan | 38 |
*Percentage of the country’s population who said they had experienced the full range of positive and negative emotions on the previous day. Source