A Cross-Cultural Comparison of Anxiety among College Students

Baloglu, A. Abbasi, William G. Masten
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

A number of studies have continued to investigate cross-cultural differences in anxiety. However, the cross-national research on anxiety is still far less advanced than other psychological constructs such as schizophrenia or depression. Thus, the purpose of the present study was to compare and contrast the levels of anxiety experienced by American, Turkish, Mexican, and Philippines college students as measured by the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. A total of 1709 college students participated in the present study. Significant differences were found in terms of the levels of state and trait anxiety. On both state and trait anxiety, Philippines scored the highest followed by Turkish, Mexican, and American students. These findings also indicate negative correlations between age and anxiety levels, with the younger participants having lower anxiety levels. ********** Systematic cross-cultural studies on psychopathology began after the World War II with a support from the World Health Organization (Good & Kleinman, 1985). Researchers have conducted a number of cross-cultural studies on psychiatric disorders in non-western societies (e.g., Chaturvedi, 1993; Weiser, Endler & Parker, 1991). Cross-cultural research on anxiety in particular is most closely associated with the works of Cattell and Spielberger (e.g., Cattell & Scheier, 1961; Spielberger, 1958, 1962, 1966, 1972, 1976). In particular, a number of cross-cultural studies have continued to investigate cross-cultural differences in anxiety (e.g., Boehnke, Frindte, Reddy, & Singhal, 1993; El-Zanhar & Hocevar, 1991; Ginter, Glanser, & Richmond, 1994; Good & Kleinman 1985; Klonoff & Landrine, 1994; Magansson & Stattin, 1978; Mumford, 1993; Olah, 1995; Spielberger & Diaz-Guerrero, 1976; Spielberger & Sharma, 1976; Sharma, Dang & Spielberger, 1986). However, the cross-national literature on anxiety is still far less advanced than other psychological constructs such as schizophrenia or depression (Good & Kleinman, 1985). A large number of cross-cultural anxiety studies have used the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI; Spielberger, Gorsuch, Lushene, Vagg, & Jacobs, 1983) in measuring and comparing anxiety levels. For example, Spielberger, Sharma and Singh (1973) administered the A-State scale of the Hindu STAI to a sample of 92 graduate students in India and the results showed there was a greater increase in the STAI A-State scores for Indian students compared to Americans. In a similar study, Sharma, Parnian, and Spielberger (1983) compared the test anxiety levels of Iranian (n = 160) and Indian (n = 160) secondary school and college students. The results indicated that the Iranian students had higher levels of test anxiety than their Indian counterparts. Tri-cultural differences in the test anxiety levels among the Iranian, Indian and U.S. student groups were interpreted as some eastern students showing greater anxiety levels. Le Compte and Oner (1977) compared Turkish (n = 499), American (n = 1800), Puerto Rican bilingual (n = 481) and Hindu (n = 160) students' anxiety levels measured by the STAI. The order of the mean A-Trait scores from low to high was Puerto Rican, American, Hindu, and Turkish students. The order of the mean A-state scores from low to high was Hindu, American and Turkish/Puerto Rican. Using the Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale (CMAS), Iwawaki, Sumida, and Okuno (1967) found that, although adult Japanese have a higher level of general anxiety than adult Americans, Japanese nine-year-olds have significantly lower levels of anxiety than nine-year-old French and Americans. A cross-cultural study of sex differences in anxiety (Ben-Zur & Zeidner, 1988) using the Hebrew version of Spielberger's State-Trait Personality Inventory (STPI/HB) with 223 female and 151 male students indicated similar scores to the norms available for American students. …
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大学生焦虑的跨文化比较
许多研究继续调查焦虑的跨文化差异。然而,对焦虑的跨国研究仍然远不如精神分裂症或抑郁症等其他心理构造先进。因此,本研究的目的是比较和对比美国、土耳其、墨西哥和菲律宾大学生的状态-特质焦虑量表所测得的焦虑水平。共有1709名大学生参与了本研究。在状态焦虑和特质焦虑水平方面存在显著差异。在状态焦虑和特质焦虑方面,菲律宾学生得分最高,其次是土耳其、墨西哥和美国学生。这些发现还表明,年龄和焦虑水平之间存在负相关,年轻的参与者焦虑水平较低。**********第二次世界大战后,在世界卫生组织的支持下,对精神病理学进行了系统的跨文化研究(Good & Kleinman, 1985)。研究人员对非西方社会的精神疾病进行了许多跨文化研究(例如,Chaturvedi, 1993;Weiser, Endler & Parker, 1991)。关于焦虑的跨文化研究尤其与卡特尔和斯皮尔伯格的作品密切相关(例如,卡特尔和谢尔,1961;斯皮尔伯格,1958年,1962年,1966年,1972年,1976年)。特别是,许多跨文化研究继续调查焦虑的跨文化差异(例如,Boehnke, Frindte, Reddy, & Singhal, 1993;El-Zanhar & Hocevar, 1991;金特,格兰瑟和里奇蒙,1994;Good & Kleinman 1985;Klonoff & Landrine, 1994;Magansson & Stattin, 1978;芒福德,1993;Olah, 1995;斯皮尔伯格和迪亚兹-格雷罗,1976;斯皮尔伯格和夏尔马,1976;Sharma, Dang & Spielberger, 1986)。然而,关于焦虑的跨国文献仍然远不如精神分裂症或抑郁症等其他心理结构先进(Good & Kleinman, 1985)。大量的跨文化焦虑研究使用了状态-特质焦虑量表(STAI;Spielberger, Gorsuch, Lushene, Vagg, & Jacobs, 1983)测量和比较焦虑水平。例如,Spielberger, Sharma和Singh(1973)对92名印度研究生样本进行了印度STAI的a - state量表,结果显示,与美国学生相比,印度学生的STAI a - state分数有更大的提高。在一个类似的研究中,Sharma, Parnian和Spielberger(1983)比较了伊朗(n = 160)和印度(n = 160)中学生和大学生的考试焦虑水平。结果表明,伊朗学生比印度学生有更高的考试焦虑水平。伊朗、印度和美国学生群体在考试焦虑水平上的三种文化差异被解释为一些东方学生表现出更大的焦虑水平。Le Compte和Oner(1977)比较了土耳其学生(n = 499)、美国学生(n = 1800)、波多黎各双语学生(n = 481)和印度学生(n = 160)的焦虑水平。平均a -特质得分从低到高的顺序是波多黎各人、美国人、印度人和土耳其人。a国家的平均得分从低到高的顺序是印度、美国和土耳其/波多黎各。Iwawaki、Sumida和Okuno(1967)使用儿童明显焦虑量表(CMAS)发现,尽管日本成年人的一般焦虑水平高于美国成年人,但日本9岁儿童的焦虑水平明显低于法国和美国9岁儿童。一项关于焦虑性别差异的跨文化研究(Ben-Zur & Zeidner, 1988)使用希伯来语版的Spielberger状态-特质人格量表(STPI/HB)对223名女性和151名男性学生进行了调查,结果显示他们的得分与美国学生的标准相似。...
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