Publication Type

Journal Article

Version

acceptedVersion

Publication Date

6-2022

Abstract

Help-seeking is commonly conceived as an instrumental behavior that improves people’s subjective well-being. However, most findings supporting a positive association between help-seeking and subjective well-being are observed in independence-preferring countries. Drawing from research demonstrating that the pathways to subjective well-being are culturally divergent, we posit that help-seeking tendencies may be detrimental to subjective well-being for members in interdependence-preferring countries where norms for preserving relational harmony and face concerns are prevalent. This study tested the moderating role of country in the relationship between help-seeking tendencies and subjective well-being using data from 5,068 American and Japanese participants. Results revealed that although help-seeking tendencies were associated with greater life satisfaction, higher positive affect, and lower negative affect among Americans, help-seeking tendencies were associated with poorer life satisfaction and lower positive affect among Japanese. We discuss the importance of adopting culturally sensitive perspectives when examining antecedents of subjective well-being.

Keywords

cultural differences, help-seeking tendencies, independent culture, interdependent culture, subjective well-being

Discipline

Applied Behavior Analysis | Social Psychology | Sociology of Culture

Research Areas

Psychology

Publication

Social Psychology Quarterly

Volume

85

Issue

2

First Page

164

Last Page

186

ISSN

0190-2725

Identifier

10.1177/01902725221077075

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Copyright Owner and License

Authors

Additional URL

https://doi.org/10.1177/01902725221077075

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