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No laughing matter: Latinas’ high quality of conversations relate to behavioral laughter

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Ramírez Esparza, Nairán
García Sierra, Adrián
Rodríguez Arauz, Gloriana
GozdeIkizer, Elif
Fernández Gómez, María José

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Abstract

Latinx in the United States have greater life expectancy than other groups, in spite of their socioeconomic and psychosocial disadvantage. This phenomenon has been described as the Latinx health paradox. This investigation observed the interplay of cultural processes andsocial networks to shed light on this paradox. Latina (N = 26) and White-European (N = 24) mothers wore adigital recorder as they went about their daily lives. Four conversation styles were characterized from the recordings to measure the mothers’ quality of their conversations (small talk and substantive conversations) within different social networks (with the father vs. other adults). As a positive indicator of well-being, laughter was assessed during the conversations. Results demonstrated that Latina mothers tend to laugh more than White-European mothers; and that this relation is mediated by substantive conversations with others. This suggests that Latinas’ cultural processes afford meaningful conversations, which relates to more behavioral laughter, a process that may have positive implications on well-being.

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LIFE CYCLE, SPEECH, POPULATION, HEALTH

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