College-Stress and Symptom-expression in International Students: A comparative study

The primary purpose of the investigation was to examine differences in symptom-expression between Caucasians and Asians in response to college-stress. College-stress was defined as adjustment problems that students experience as a function of exposure to a college environment. The propensity of each...

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Main Author: Shenoy, Uma Ajit
Other Authors: Psychology
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28186
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07022001-115853/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-281862020-09-26T05:33:39Z College-Stress and Symptom-expression in International Students: A comparative study Shenoy, Uma Ajit Psychology Jones, Russell T. Ollendick, Thomas H. Fu, Victoria R. Schulman, Robert S. Eisler, Richard M. College stress symptomatology Cross-cultural The primary purpose of the investigation was to examine differences in symptom-expression between Caucasians and Asians in response to college-stress. College-stress was defined as adjustment problems that students experience as a function of exposure to a college environment. The propensity of each group to express symptoms in response to stress in somatic (i.e., bodily) versus psychological (i.e., anxiety and depression) modes was investigated. Previous reports have postulated a somatization hypothesis for Asians, as opposed to a psychologization tendency in Caucasians. Intra-Asian differences with respect to symptom-expression were also examined. Data were collected electronically. 115 graduate students participated in the study. Using Fisher's transformations to compare correlations, it was found that neither the somatization nor the psychologization hypotheses were supported. However, within Asians depression demonstrated a stronger association with stress than somatic symptoms. A subsidiary purpose of this investigation was to determine whether attribution-style was an aspect of culture that could lead to differences in symptom-expression. It was hypothesized that Asians would have a more external attribution-style, while Caucasian-Americans would have a more internal style. External style was hypothesized to be related to a somatic tendency, while internal style was hypothesized to be related to a psychological tendency. None of these hypotheses were supported. Finally, some exploratory analyses were carried out to assess the effect of demographic variables on symptom-expression. Sex was related to anxiety symptoms, while level of education was related to somatic symptom-reports. Overall, these findings highlight the need for cross-cultural research in psychology to adopt a more systemic approach in studying variables, as opposed to using merely country/culture as an independent variable. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:13:41Z 2014-03-14T20:13:41Z 2000-07-05 2001-07-02 2002-09-02 2001-09-02 Dissertation etd-07022001-115853 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28186 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07022001-115853/ dissertation.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic College stress
symptomatology
Cross-cultural
spellingShingle College stress
symptomatology
Cross-cultural
Shenoy, Uma Ajit
College-Stress and Symptom-expression in International Students: A comparative study
description The primary purpose of the investigation was to examine differences in symptom-expression between Caucasians and Asians in response to college-stress. College-stress was defined as adjustment problems that students experience as a function of exposure to a college environment. The propensity of each group to express symptoms in response to stress in somatic (i.e., bodily) versus psychological (i.e., anxiety and depression) modes was investigated. Previous reports have postulated a somatization hypothesis for Asians, as opposed to a psychologization tendency in Caucasians. Intra-Asian differences with respect to symptom-expression were also examined. Data were collected electronically. 115 graduate students participated in the study. Using Fisher's transformations to compare correlations, it was found that neither the somatization nor the psychologization hypotheses were supported. However, within Asians depression demonstrated a stronger association with stress than somatic symptoms. A subsidiary purpose of this investigation was to determine whether attribution-style was an aspect of culture that could lead to differences in symptom-expression. It was hypothesized that Asians would have a more external attribution-style, while Caucasian-Americans would have a more internal style. External style was hypothesized to be related to a somatic tendency, while internal style was hypothesized to be related to a psychological tendency. None of these hypotheses were supported. Finally, some exploratory analyses were carried out to assess the effect of demographic variables on symptom-expression. Sex was related to anxiety symptoms, while level of education was related to somatic symptom-reports. Overall, these findings highlight the need for cross-cultural research in psychology to adopt a more systemic approach in studying variables, as opposed to using merely country/culture as an independent variable. === Ph. D.
author2 Psychology
author_facet Psychology
Shenoy, Uma Ajit
author Shenoy, Uma Ajit
author_sort Shenoy, Uma Ajit
title College-Stress and Symptom-expression in International Students: A comparative study
title_short College-Stress and Symptom-expression in International Students: A comparative study
title_full College-Stress and Symptom-expression in International Students: A comparative study
title_fullStr College-Stress and Symptom-expression in International Students: A comparative study
title_full_unstemmed College-Stress and Symptom-expression in International Students: A comparative study
title_sort college-stress and symptom-expression in international students: a comparative study
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28186
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07022001-115853/
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