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International comparisons of emotionally reactive problems in preschoolers: CBCL/11/2-5 findings from 21 societies

Authors :
Rescorla, Leslie A.
Genaro, Breana
Ivanova, Masha Y.
Bilenberg, Niels
Bjarnadottir, Gudrun
Capron, Christiane
De Pauw, Sarah
Dias, Pedro
Dobrean, Anca
Doepfner, Manfred
Duyme, Michel
Esmaeili, Elaheh
Ezpeleta, Lourdes
Frigerio, Alessandra
Fung, Daniel S. S.
Gonçalves, Miguel M.
Guomundsson, Halldor
Jeng, Suh-Fang
Jusiene, Roma
Kim, Young-Ah
Kristensen, Solveig
Liu, Jianghong
Lecannelier, Felipe
Leung, Patrick
Machado, Bárbara César
Montirosso, Rosario
Oh, Kyung-Ja
Ooi, Yoon Phaik
Pluck, Julia
Pomalima, Rolando
Pranvera, Jetishi
Shahini, Mimoza
Silva, Jaime
Valverde, Jose
van der Ende, Jan
Van Leeuwen, Karla
Verhulst, Frank C.
Wu, Yen-Tzu
Yurdusen, Sema
Zubrick, Stephen R.
Universidade do Minho
Source :
Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal, Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP), instacron:RCAAP
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Routledge, 2020.

Abstract

Our goal was to conduct international comparisons of emotion regulation using the 9-item Emotionally Reactive (ER) syndrome of the Child Behavior Checklist for Ages 11/2-5. We analyzed parent ratings for 17,964 preschoolers from 21 societies, which were grouped into 8 GLOBE study culture clusters (e.g., Nordic, Confucian Asian). Omnicultural broad base rates for ER items ranged from 8.0% to 38.8%. Rank ordering for mean item ratings varied widely across societies (omnicultural Q = .50) but less so across culture clusters (M Q = .66). Societal similarity in mean item rank ordering varied by culture cluster, with large within-cluster similarity for Anglo (Q = .96), Latin Europe (Q = .74), Germanic (Q = .77), and Latin American (Q = .76) clusters, but smaller within-cluster similarity for Nordic, Eastern Europe, and Confucian Asian clusters (Qs = .52, .23, and .44, respectively). Confirmatory factor analyses of the ER syndrome supported configural invariance for all 21 societies. All 9 items showed full to approximate metric invariance, but only 3 items showed approximate scalar invariance. The ER syndrome correlated . 65 with the Anxious/Depressed (A/D) syndrome and .63 with the Aggressive Behavior syndrome. ER items varied in base rates and factor loadings, and societies varied in rank ordering of items as low, medium, or high in mean ratings. Item rank order similarity among societies in the same culture cluster varied widely across culture clusters, suggesting the importance of cultural factors in the assessment of emotion regulation in preschoolers.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal, Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP), instacron:RCAAP
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..2046fd04ba381c8c9e253ca1751002c1