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Title: | Neither Eastern nor Western: Patterns of Independence and Interdependence in Mediterranean Societies |
Authors: | Uskul, Ayse K. Kirchner-Hausler, Alexander Vignoles, Vivian L. Rodriguez-Bailon, Rosa Castillo, Vanessa A. Cross, Susan E. Yalcin, Meral Gezici Harb, Charles Husnu, Shenel Ishii, Keiko Jin, Shuxian Karamaouna, Panagiota Kafetsios, Konstantinos Kateri, Evangelia Matamoros-Lima, Juan Liu, Daqing Miniesy, Rania Na, Jinkyung Ozkan, Zafer Pagliaro, Stefano Psaltis, Charis Rabie, Dina Teresi, Manuel Uchida, Yukiko Ordu Üniversitesi 0000-0002-8336-2423 0000-0002-8011-5371 0000-0003-2209-4311 0000-0002-9475-0827 0000-0001-8013-9931 0000-0002-9368-4397 0000-0001-6669-8745 0000-0003-3958-0092 |
Keywords: | Mediterranean societies, interdependence, self-construal, social orientation, cognitive style IMPLICIT INDEPENDENCE, CULTURAL-DIFFERENCES, SELF, FACE, ANTHROPOLOGY, AFFORDANCES, DIGNITY, STYLES, PEOPLE, SCALES |
Issue Date: | 2023 |
Publisher: | AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC-WASHINGTON |
Citation: | Uskul, AK., Kirchner-Häusler, A., Vignoles, VL., Rodriguez-Bailón, R., Castillo, VA., Cross, SE., Yalçin, MG., Harb, C., Husnu, S., Ishii, K., Jin, SX., Karamaouna, P., Kafetsios, K., Kateri, E., Matamoros-Lima, J., Liu, DQ., Miniesy, R., Na, J., Özkan, Z., Pagliaro, S., Psaltis, C., Rabie, D., Teresi, M., Uchida, Y. (2023). Neither Eastern nor Western: Patterns of Independence and Interdependence in Mediterranean Societies. J. Pers. Soc. Psychol., 125(3), 471-495. https://doi.org/10.1037/pspa0000342 |
Abstract: | Social science research has highlighted honor as a central value driving social behavior in Mediterranean societies, which requires individuals to develop and protect a sense of their personal self-worth and their social reputation, through assertiveness, competitiveness, and retaliation in the face of threats. We predicted that members of Mediterranean societies may exhibit a distinctive combination of independent and interdependent social orientation, self-construal, and cognitive style, compared to more commonly studied East Asian and Anglo-Western cultural groups. We compared participants from eight Mediterranean societies (Spain, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Cyprus [Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot communities], Lebanon, Egypt) to participants from East Asian (Korea, Japan) and Anglo-Western (the United Kingdom, the United States) societies, using six implicit social orientation indicators, an eight-dimensional self-construal scale, and four cognitive style indicators. Compared with both East Asian and Anglo-Western samples, samples from Mediterranean societies distinctively emphasized several forms of independence (relative intensity of disengaging [vs. engaging] emotions, happiness based on disengaging [vs. engaging] emotions, dispositional [vs. situational] attribution style, self-construal as different from others, self-directed, self-reliant, self-expressive, and consistent) and interdependence (closeness to in-group [vs. out-group] members, self-construal as connected and committed to close others). Our findings extend previous insights into patterns of cultural orientation beyond commonly examined East-West comparisons to an understudied world region. |
Description: | WoS Categories: Psychology, Social Web of Science Index: Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) Research Areas: Psychology |
URI: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/pspa0000342 https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000980129100001 http://earsiv.odu.edu.tr:8080/xmlui/handle/11489/5353 |
ISSN: | 0022-3514 1939-1315 |
Appears in Collections: | Psikoloji |
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