Sombat Tapanya
Chiang Mai University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sombat Tapanya.
Journal of Family Psychology | 2011
Kirby Deater-Deckard; Jennifer E. Lansford; Patrick S. Malone; Liane Peña Alampay; Emma Sorbring; Dario Bacchini; Anna Silvia Bombi; Marc H. Bornstein; Lei Chang; Laura Di Giunta; Kenneth A. Dodge; Paul Oburu; Concetta Pastorelli; Ann T. Skinner; Sombat Tapanya; Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado; Arnaldo Zelli; Suha M. Al-Hassan
The goal of the current study was to investigate potential cross-cultural differences in the covariation between two of the major dimensions of parenting behavior: control and warmth. Participants included 1,421 (51% female) 7- to 10-year-old (M = 8.29, SD = .67 years) children and their mothers and fathers representing 13 cultural groups in nine countries in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and North and South America. Children and parents completed questionnaires and interviews regarding mother and father control and warmth. Greater warmth was associated with more control, but this association varied widely between cultural groups.
Early Child Development and Care | 2007
Julia Gillen; Catherine Ann Cameron; Sombat Tapanya; Giuliana Pinto; Roger Hancock; Susan Young; Beatrice Accorti Gamannossi
This paper explores the methodology of an ecological investigation of aspects of culture in the interactional construction of early childhood in diverse global communities: Peru, Italy, Canada, Thailand, and the United Kingdom. Regarding culture as a dynamic dimension of the child’s socialisation, the approach taken was to film a ‘day in the life’ of a two‐and‐a‐half‐year‐old girl in each location. The principal investigators viewed these five ‘days’ and selected clips were made into a compilation tape, to be interrogated and interpreted by the local investigators and the child’s family. These latter reflections were also taped and then applied to a growing appreciation of the child in cultural context. Other inter‐researcher techniques were used to elucidate and explore events and values further. Reflexive concerns as to the interplay between aims and methods in interpretive research are critical components of this endeavour to develop new cultural understandings of the girls in context.
Cross-Cultural Research | 2012
Diane L. Putnick; Marc H. Bornstein; Jennifer E. Lansford; Lei Chang; Kirby Deater-Deckard; Laura Di Giunta; Sevtap Gurdal; Kenneth A. Dodge; Patrick S. Malone; Paul Oburu; Concetta Pastorelli; Ann T. Skinner; Emma Sorbring; Sombat Tapanya; Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado; Arnaldo Zelli; Liane Peña Alampay; Suha M. Al-Hassan; Dario Bacchini; Anna Silvia Bombi
The authors assessed whether mothers’ and fathers’ self-reports of acceptance-rejection, warmth, and hostility/rejection/neglect (HRN) of their preadolescent children differ cross-nationally and relative to the gender of the parent and child in 10 communities in 9 countries, including China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States (N = 998 families). Mothers and fathers in all countries reported a high degree of acceptance and warmth, and a low degree of HRN, but countries also varied. Mothers reported greater acceptance of children than fathers in China, Italy, Sweden, and the United States, and these effects were accounted for by greater self-reported warmth in mothers than in fathers in China, Italy, the Philippines, Sweden, and Thailand and less HRN in mothers than in fathers in Sweden. Fathers reported greater warmth than mothers in Kenya. Mother and father acceptance-rejection were moderately correlated. Relative levels of mother and father acceptance and rejection appear to be country specific.
International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2010
Jennifer E. Lansford; Patrick S. Malone; Kenneth A. Dodge; Lei Chang; Nandita Chaudhary; Sombat Tapanya; Paul Oburu; Kirby Deater-Deckard
Using data from 195 dyads of mothers and children (age range = 8—12 years; M = 10.63) in four countries (China, India, the Philippines, and Thailand), this study examined children’s perceptions of maternal hostility as a mediator of the links between physical discipline and harsh verbal discipline and children’s adjustment. Both physical discipline and harsh verbal discipline had direct effects on mothers’ reports of children’s anxiety and aggression; three of these four links were mediated by children’s perceptions of maternal hostility. In contrast, there were no significant direct effects of physical discipline and harsh verbal discipline on children’s reports of their own anxiety and aggression. Instead, both physical discipline and harsh verbal discipline had indirect effects on the outcomes through children’s perceptions of maternal hostility. We identified a significant interaction between perceived normativeness and use of harsh verbal discipline on children’s perception of maternal hostility, but children’s perception of the normativeness of physical discipline did not moderate the relation between physical discipline and perceived maternal hostility. The effects of harsh verbal discipline were more adverse when children perceived that form of discipline as being nonnormative than when children perceived that form of discipline as being normative. Results are largely consistent with a theoretical model positing that the meaning children attach to parents’ discipline strategies is important in understanding associations between discipline and children’s adjustment, and that cultural context is associated with children’s interpretations of their parents’ behavior.
International Journal of Aging & Human Development | 1997
Sombat Tapanya; Richard M. Nicki; Ousa Jarusawad
An investigation of the relationship between Allports concept of religious orientation and worry was conducted with samples (N = 104) of elderly Buddhist Thais and Christian Canadians. Participants ranged in age between sixty-five and ninety years old (mean = 71). A multiple regression analysis revealed that overall for both Buddhists and Christians an intrinsic orientation toward religion was associated with lesser worry. Furthermore, an extrinsic orientation among Buddhists, in contrast to Christians, was found to be linked to greater worry. These results were discussed in the context of the practice and beliefs of Buddhism and Christianity.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Kenneth A. Dodge; Patrick S. Malone; Jennifer E. Lansford; Emma Sorbring; Ann T. Skinner; Sombat Tapanya; Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado; Arnaldo Zelli; Liane Peña Alampay; Suha M. Al-Hassan; Dario Bacchini; Anna Silvia Bombi; Marc H. Bornstein; Lei Chang; Kirby Deater-Deckard; Laura Di Giunta; Paul Oburu; Concetta Pastorelli
Significance Interpersonal conflict and violence occur within and between groups around the world. Although not proving causation, this study is significant because it suggests a key psychological mechanism in children’s chronic aggression that might be targeted for intervention: one’s attribution that a peer is acting with hostile intent. When children attribute hostile intent to peers, they are more likely to predict they would react aggressively than when they attribute benign intent. Differences in this tendency statistically account for differences in future chronic aggressive behavior problems across children, as well as differences in chronic aggressive behavior problem rates across ecological-context groups. Identifying this mechanism could lead to novel interventions, education, and policies that reduce or prevent aggressive behavior. We tested a model that children’s tendency to attribute hostile intent to others in response to provocation is a key psychological process that statistically accounts for individual differences in reactive aggressive behavior and that this mechanism contributes to global group differences in children’s chronic aggressive behavior problems. Participants were 1,299 children (mean age at year 1 = 8.3 y; 51% girls) from 12 diverse ecological-context groups in nine countries worldwide, followed across 4 y. In year 3, each child was presented with each of 10 hypothetical vignettes depicting an ambiguous provocation toward the child and was asked to attribute the likely intent of the provocateur (coded as benign or hostile) and to predict his or her own behavioral response (coded as nonaggression or reactive aggression). Mothers and children independently rated the child’s chronic aggressive behavior problems in years 2, 3, and 4. In every ecological group, in those situations in which a child attributed hostile intent to a peer, that child was more likely to report that he or she would respond with reactive aggression than in situations when that same child attributed benign intent. Across children, hostile attributional bias scores predicted higher mother- and child-rated chronic aggressive behavior problems, even controlling for prior aggression. Ecological group differences in the tendency for children to attribute hostile intent statistically accounted for a significant portion of group differences in chronic aggressive behavior problems. The findings suggest a psychological mechanism for group differences in aggressive behavior and point to potential interventions to reduce aggressive behavior.
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2015
Diane L. Putnick; Marc H. Bornstein; Jennifer E. Lansford; Patrick S. Malone; Concetta Pastorelli; Ann T. Skinner; Emma Sorbring; Sombat Tapanya; Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado; Arnaldo Zelli; Liane Peña Alampay; Suha M. Al-Hassan; Dario Bacchini; Anna Silvia Bombi; Lei Chang; Kirby Deater-Deckard; Laura Di Giunta; Kenneth A. Dodge; Paul Oburu
BACKGROUND It is generally believed that parental rejection of children leads to child maladaptation. However, the specific effects of perceived parental acceptance-rejection on diverse domains of child adjustment and development have been incompletely documented, and whether these effects hold across diverse populations and for mothers and fathers are still open questions. METHODS This study assessed childrens perceptions of mother and father acceptance-rejection in 1,247 families from China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States as antecedent predictors of later internalizing and externalizing behavior problems, school performance, prosocial behavior, and social competence. RESULTS Higher perceived parental rejection predicted increases in internalizing and externalizing behavior problems and decreases in school performance and prosocial behavior across 3 years controlling for within-wave relations, stability across waves, and parental age, education, and social desirability bias. Patterns of relations were similar across mothers and fathers and, with a few exceptions, all nine countries. CONCLUSIONS Childrens perceptions of maternal and paternal acceptance-rejection have small but nearly universal effects on multiple aspects of their adjustment and development regardless of the familys country of origin.
Family Science | 2011
Li Huang; Patrick S. Malone; Jennifer E. Lansford; Kirby Deater-Deckard; Laura Di Giunta; Anna Silvia Bombi; Marc H. Bornstein; Lei Chang; Kenneth A. Dodge; Paul Oburu; Concetta Pastorelli; Ann T. Skinner; Emma Sorbring; Sombat Tapanya; Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado; Arnaldo Zelli; Liane Peña Alampay; Suha M. Al-Hassan; Dario Bacchini
The measurement invariance of mother-reported use of 18 discipline strategies was examined in samples from 13 different ethnic/cultural groups in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States). Participants included approximately 100–120 mothers and their children aged seven to 10 years from each group. The results of exploratory factor analyses and multi-group categorical confirmatory factor analyses (MCCFA) indicated that a seven-factor solution was feasible across the cultural groups, as shown by marginally sufficient evidence for configural and metric invariance for the mother-reported frequency on the discipline interview. This study makes a contribution on measurement invariance to the parenting literature, and establishes the mother-report aspect of the discipline interview as an instrument for use in further cross-cultural research on discipline.
Journal of Youth Studies | 2012
Jiawen Chen; Cindy Lau; Sombat Tapanya; Catherine Ann Cameron
Identity formations are critical developmental accomplishments in negotiating resilience. They involve establishing cohesive senses of self and appraisals of inherent personal strengths and weaknesses in contexts of environmental offerings. Further, identity processes call upon understanding the collective beliefs and values of ones community. Using Day in the Life semi-naturalistic videos, photo elicitation and interview data, we observed four at risk but resilient migrant adolescents in two different cultural contexts (Vancouver, Canada, and Chiang Mai, Thailand) and inspected relationships between their identity formations (personal, social, cultural, and religious) and their positive participation in, and personal interpretations of, their social relationships and cultural engagements. We ask how and in what fashion the youths’ identities, practices, and perspectives might serve protective functions, especially in the face of significant geographic dislocation.
Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings | 2008
Anna Chur-Hansen; John E. Carr; Christine Bundy; Juan José Sánchez-Sosa; Sombat Tapanya; Saeed Wahass
The behavioral sciences are taught in medical curricula around the world. In the current paper psychologists teaching in medical schools in Australia, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, the United Kingdom and the United States share their experience and reflections. Whilst direct comparisons between countries are not made, the themes that are evident within and between accounts are instructive. As behavioral scientists around the globe are struggling to maintain a presence in medical education many of the reasons behind this are shared, regardless of the country. Challenges discussed include those related to the impact of unrealized potential contributions of psychologists as health care professionals, teaching of behavioral sciences by other professions, domination of the biomedical model without a corresponding recognition of psychology as science, and modern medical pedagogies such as problem-based learning, which favor biomedicine. Systemic and political barriers over which we as a discipline may have little control are also highlighted.