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1.
Heliyon ; 6(9): e04903, 2020 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32984604

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Over 500 cases of school-based corporal punishment (CP) are reported annually in Japan. A major feature of CP in Japanese schools is its high prevalence during extracurricular sports activities. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of having suffered a CP-related injury on victims' later use of CP in an athletics environment. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: Participants were 704 undergraduate students of a sports instructor training course who were recruited as volunteers during classes. METHODS: A questionnaire on past experiences of CP and later perpetration of CP was administered to the participants. It was found that 31.3% of the students had experienced CP and 2.3% had perpetrated CP on others. We conducted logistic regression analyses with CP as an objective dependent variable and gender, grade and past CP experience (elementary, junior high school, or high school) as explanatory variables. RESULTS: The results of the analysis revealed that having experienced CP had a significant relationship with the victims' perpetration of CP. Elementary school was the only life stage for which there was a significant correlation between having been a victim of CP and practicing it in the future. CONCLUSIONS: Many studies have explored the use of CP in families, while others have demonstrated that physical education students who received CP themselves are more likely to find CP an acceptable method of maintaining discipline. This is the first study that investigates whether students who experienced CP show a higher prevalence of CP perpetration. The findings indicate that experiencing CP in childhood is a risk factor for future use of CP. Proper care is required for children who have experienced CP at a young age.

2.
J Soc Work End Life Palliat Care ; 7(2-3): 263-80, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21895440

RESUMO

Campus suicides have increased manifold across academic institutions, often leaving unresolved bereavement issues in these institutions, primarily because students are supposed to carry on with their daily activities with little or no time and attention paid to this necessary process. In this study, the role of cognitive-emotional processes in coping, especially when one is grieving a death, was investigated through a comparison between 40 bereaved Japanese and Indian female college students. The participants were assessed for resilience, cognitive-emotional regulation, posttraumatic cognition, and coping strategies in the aftermath of the suicide death of someone close. Positive reappraisal mediated the relationship between resilience and proactive coping, whereas negative cognitions about the self mediated the relationship between resilience and proactive as well as reflective coping. The participants from the two cultures differed significantly on resilience, with Indians scoring higher than Japanese young adults. The findings are analyzed in light of the coping with distressful life events model and could have possible implications for social workers and/or mental health professionals in terms of acceptability of interventions.


Assuntos
Adaptação Psicológica , Luto , Cognição , Comparação Transcultural , Emoções , Estudantes/psicologia , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Índia/epidemiologia , Japão/epidemiologia , Resiliência Psicológica , Suicídio/psicologia
3.
Emotion ; 2(1): 75-84, 2002 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12899367

RESUMO

This article highlights a range of design and analytical tools for studying the cross-cultural communication of emotion using forced-choice experimental designs. American, Indian, and Japanese participants judged facial expressions from all 3 cultures. A factorial experimental design is used, balanced n x n across cultures, to separate "absolute" cultural differences from "relational" effects characterizing the relationship between the emotion expressor and perceiver. Use of a response bias correction is illustrated for the tendency to endorse particular multiple-choice categories more often than others. Treating response bias also as an opportunity to gain insight into attributional style, the authors examined similarities and differences in response patterns across cultural groups. Finally, the authors examined patterns in the errors or confusions that participants make during emotion recognition and documented strong similarity across cultures.


Assuntos
Comparação Transcultural , Emoções , Etnicidade/psicologia , Expressão Facial , Percepção Social , Adulto , Comunicação , Discriminação Psicológica , Emoções/classificação , Feminino , Humanos , Índia , Controle Interno-Externo , Japão , Masculino , Estados Unidos
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