Research Article

Cross-Cultural Examination of Emotional Expressivity, Beliefs About Emotions, and Depression of University Students

Volume: 7 Number: 2 December 31, 2018
EN

Cross-Cultural Examination of Emotional Expressivity, Beliefs About Emotions, and Depression of University Students

Abstract

This study investigates the cross-cultural differences between emotional expressivity, beliefs about emotions, and depression levels among university students from different continents, namely, Africa and Asia. Participants (n=114; n=88, Africa and n=26, Asia) were English speaking students of European University of Lefke studying at different faculties (Social Sciences, Engineering, Health, and Agriculture). They completed Beliefs about Emotions Scale (BES), Berkeley Expressivity Questionnaire (BEQ), and The Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CESD-R). Findings suggested that Asian students’ CESD-R sadness and suicidal ideation subscale scores, as well as BEQ positive expressivity scores, have been found higher than the scores of African students. Female students differed with significantly higher scores than males of CESD-R guilt subscale and BEQ impulse strength subscale score. Further, a significant difference between CESD-R scores according to class was obtained as well, junior students had higher scores than senior students. CESD-R total scores indicate that Health Faculty students’ scores are higher than the scores of Engineering Faculty students. As a result, Asian students found to be more prone to sadness than African students. 

Keywords

References

  1. Ainsworth, M.D.S., Bell, S.M., & Stayton, D.J. (1974). Infant-mother attachment and social development: ‘‘Socialization’’ as a product of reciprocal responsiveness to signals. In P.M. Richards (Ed.) The integration of a child into a social world. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 99-135.
  2. Akın, A.(2012). Emotional Expressivity and Loneliness in Religious and Moral Studies Education Students, TOJCE: The Online Journal of Counselling and Education, 1(3): 31-40.
  3. Akın, A., Satıcı, S.A., & Kayış, A.R. (2012). Emotional Expressivity and Submissive Behavior, Journal of Education and Instructional Studies. 2(1): 1-6.
  4. Beck, A.T. (1967). Depression: Clinical, experimental a theoreticalcal aspects. New York: Harper and Row Press.
  5. Beck, A.T., Emery, G., & Greenberg, R.L. (1985). Anxiety disorders and phobias: A cognitive perspective. New York: Basic Books.
  6. Burgin, C. J., Brown, L. H., Royal, A., Silvia, P. J., Barrantes-Vidal, N., & Kwapil, T. R. (2012). Being with others and feeling happy: Emotional expressivity in everyday life. Personality and Individual Differences, 53(3), 185–190.
  7. Clark, D.M., & Wells, A. (1995). A cognitive model of social phobia. In: Heimberg R.G., Liebowitz, M.R., Hope, D.A., & Schneier, F.R. editors. Social Phobia: Diagnosis, assessment and treatment (pp 69–93). New York: Guilford Press. Corstorphine, E. (2006Cognitive-emotional-behavioral therapy the eating disorders: Working with beliefs about emotions. Europian Eating Disorders Review.14, 448–461.
  8. DeKlerk, H.M, Dada, S., & Alant, E. (2014). Children’s identification of graphic symbols representing four basic emotions: Comparison of Afrikaans-speaking and Sepedi-speaking children. Journal of Communication Disorders, 52:1-15.

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Economics

Journal Section

Research Article

Publication Date

December 31, 2018

Submission Date

October 16, 2018

Acceptance Date

December 30, 2018

Published in Issue

Year 2018 Volume: 7 Number: 2

APA
Okray, Z., Okumuşoğlu, S., Direktör, C., & Hüseyinzade Şimşek, A. (2018). Cross-Cultural Examination of Emotional Expressivity, Beliefs About Emotions, and Depression of University Students. Afro Eurasian Studies, 7(2), 254-278. https://doi.org/10.33722/afes.471071
AMA
1.Okray Z, Okumuşoğlu S, Direktör C, Hüseyinzade Şimşek A. Cross-Cultural Examination of Emotional Expressivity, Beliefs About Emotions, and Depression of University Students. Afro-Eurasian. 2018;7(2):254-278. doi:10.33722/afes.471071
Chicago
Okray, Zihniye, Sultan Okumuşoğlu, Cemaliye Direktör, and Anjelika Hüseyinzade Şimşek. 2018. “Cross-Cultural Examination of Emotional Expressivity, Beliefs About Emotions, and Depression of University Students”. Afro Eurasian Studies 7 (2): 254-78. https://doi.org/10.33722/afes.471071.
EndNote
Okray Z, Okumuşoğlu S, Direktör C, Hüseyinzade Şimşek A (December 1, 2018) Cross-Cultural Examination of Emotional Expressivity, Beliefs About Emotions, and Depression of University Students. Afro Eurasian Studies 7 2 254–278.
IEEE
[1]Z. Okray, S. Okumuşoğlu, C. Direktör, and A. Hüseyinzade Şimşek, “Cross-Cultural Examination of Emotional Expressivity, Beliefs About Emotions, and Depression of University Students”, Afro-Eurasian, vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 254–278, Dec. 2018, doi: 10.33722/afes.471071.
ISNAD
Okray, Zihniye - Okumuşoğlu, Sultan - Direktör, Cemaliye - Hüseyinzade Şimşek, Anjelika. “Cross-Cultural Examination of Emotional Expressivity, Beliefs About Emotions, and Depression of University Students”. Afro Eurasian Studies 7/2 (December 1, 2018): 254-278. https://doi.org/10.33722/afes.471071.
JAMA
1.Okray Z, Okumuşoğlu S, Direktör C, Hüseyinzade Şimşek A. Cross-Cultural Examination of Emotional Expressivity, Beliefs About Emotions, and Depression of University Students. Afro-Eurasian. 2018;7:254–278.
MLA
Okray, Zihniye, et al. “Cross-Cultural Examination of Emotional Expressivity, Beliefs About Emotions, and Depression of University Students”. Afro Eurasian Studies, vol. 7, no. 2, Dec. 2018, pp. 254-78, doi:10.33722/afes.471071.
Vancouver
1.Zihniye Okray, Sultan Okumuşoğlu, Cemaliye Direktör, Anjelika Hüseyinzade Şimşek. Cross-Cultural Examination of Emotional Expressivity, Beliefs About Emotions, and Depression of University Students. Afro-Eurasian. 2018 Dec. 1;7(2):254-78. doi:10.33722/afes.471071