Grief and mourning in cross-cultural perspective
HRAF Press • New Haven • Published In • Pages: 231 •
By Rosenblatt, Paul C., Walsh, R. Patricia, Jackson, Douglas A.
Hypothesis
There are sex differences for emotion expressed by bereaved persons. Women cry significantly more frequently and average a higher frequency of self mutilation during bereavement than do men. But men were judged to have a significantly higher frequency of anger and aggression during bereavement than women (145, 146)
| Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| t-test | Supported | p<.001 | UNKNOWN | Two-tailed |
| Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Anger And Aggression During Bereavement | Dependent | Mourning |
| Crying During Bereavement | Dependent | Mourning |
| Gender | Independent | Gender Roles And Issues |
| Self-mutilation During Bereavement | Dependent | Mourning |