Department of Psychology.
Department of Psychology, Seoul National University.
Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol. 2012 Apr;18(2):181-191. doi: 10.1037/a0027690.
North American research has consistently reported higher social anxiety among people of Asian heritage compared to people of Western heritage. The present study used a cross-national sample of 692 university students to explore explanatory hypotheses using planned contrasts of group differences in social anxiety and related variables. The East Asian socialization hypothesis proposed social anxiety would show a linear relation corresponding to the degree of exposure to East Asian cultural norms. This hypothesis was not supported. The cultural discrepancy hypothesis examined whether bicultural East Asian participants (residing in Canada) would endorse higher social anxiety in comparison to unicultural participants (Western-heritage Canadians and native Koreans and Chinese). Compared to unicultural participants, bicultural East Asian participants reported higher social anxiety and depression, a relation that was partially mediated by bicultural participants' reports of lower self-efficacy about initiating social relationships and lower perceived social status. Overall, the results suggest higher reports of social anxiety among bicultural East Asians may be conceptualized within the context of cultural discrepancy with the mainstream culture.
北美的研究一直表明,与西方传统的人相比,亚洲传统的人更有可能出现社交焦虑。本研究使用了一个跨国家的 692 名大学生样本,通过对社会焦虑和相关变量的群体差异进行有计划的对比,探索了解释性假设。东亚社会化假说提出,社会焦虑会呈现出与东亚文化规范的接触程度相对应的线性关系。这一假说没有得到支持。文化差异假说检验了具有双重文化背景的东亚参与者(居住在加拿大)是否会比具有单一文化背景的参与者(加拿大的西方传统人和韩国人和中国人)表现出更高的社交焦虑。与单一文化背景的参与者相比,具有双重文化背景的东亚参与者报告的社交焦虑和抑郁程度更高,这种关系部分是由参与者报告的在发起社交关系方面的自我效能感较低和感知社会地位较低所介导的。总的来说,这些结果表明,具有双重文化背景的东亚人报告的更高的社交焦虑程度,可以用与主流文化的文化差异来解释。