Department of Psychology, Western Washington University, Bellingham, Washington, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Jul 12;14(7):e0219478. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0219478. eCollection 2019.
Most prior research on culture and the dynamics of social support has focused on the emotional outcomes for social support recipients. Though an existing body of research has identified cross-cultural differences in the emotional correlates of receiving different types of social support, researchers have seldom examined possible cultural differences in the experience of social support providers. This study used the Day Reconstruction Method to examine cultural differences in the emotional correlates of the provision of solicited and unsolicited and emotional and informational social support in the daily lives of Singaporean (n = 79) and American (n = 88) participants. Singaporean participants reported providing more social support overall. Regardless of culture, participants reported more positive emotion (affection, happiness) and less negative emotion (anger, anxiety) when they provided emotional social support. Also, multilevel modeling analyses revealed a 3-way interaction between culture, social support provision, and social support solicitation, indicating cultural differences in negative emotional responses to providing solicited social support. Specifically, results suggest that attempts to provide more solicited social support were associated with more negative emotions in the U.S. In contrast, provider negative emotions were highest in Singapore when the provider did not meet the recipient's request for support. Patterns of cultural differences in social support provision are dissimilar to-rather than simply mirroring-those found in published research on social support receipt, highlighting the importance of studying social support provision as a distinct phenomenon.
大多数关于文化和社会支持动态的先前研究都集中在社会支持接受者的情感结果上。尽管现有大量研究已经确定了不同文化之间接受不同类型社会支持的情感相关性存在差异,但研究人员很少研究社会支持提供者的体验中可能存在的文化差异。本研究使用日间重建法,考察了新加坡(n=79)和美国(n=88)参与者日常生活中提供有求和无求的情感和信息社会支持的情感相关性的文化差异。新加坡参与者总体上报告提供了更多的社会支持。无论文化如何,参与者在提供情感社会支持时报告了更多的积极情绪(喜爱、快乐)和更少的消极情绪(愤怒、焦虑)。此外,多层次建模分析揭示了文化、社会支持提供和社会支持请求之间的 3 -way 交互作用,表明在对提供有求社会支持的负面情绪反应方面存在文化差异。具体而言,结果表明,在美国,试图提供更多的有求社会支持与更多的负面情绪有关。相比之下,当提供者不能满足接受者对支持的请求时,提供者的负面情绪在新加坡最高。社会支持提供方面的文化差异模式与已发表的关于社会支持接受的研究中发现的模式不同,而不是简单地反映这些模式,这强调了将社会支持提供作为一个独特现象进行研究的重要性。