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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Psychological differentiation in cross‐cultural perspective

Herman A. Witkin, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1975 - 
- Vol. 1975, Iss: 1, pp 100
TLDR
For instance, this article reviewed cross-cultural studies of psychological differentiation with the objectives of: examining the applicability, across cultures, of the main propositions of differentiation theory and the generality of its intracultural supporting data; identifying extensions of the theory, and of its empirical base, suggested by the cross-culture findings; and delineating problems in the existing data and useful lines of further crosscultural inquiry.
Abstract
Cross-cultural studies of psychological differentiation are reviewed with the objectives of: examining the applicability, across cultures, of the main propositions of differentiation theory and the generality of its intracultural supporting data; identifying extensions of the theory, and of its empirical base, suggested by the cross-cultural findings; and delineating problems in the existing data and useful lines of further cross-cultural inquiry. The evidence on self-consistency, age changes and stability indicates that these aspects of differentiation show patterns in other cultures essentially similar to those observed in the original American studies. Numerous cross-cultural studies have sought the sources of individual and group differences in differentiation in family practices, in cultural influences and in ecological pressures. The evidence from these studies suggests that less differentiated functioning, including a more field-dependent perceptual mode, is associated with insistence upon adherence to adult authority, female salience and the absence of strong male role models in the family; “tight” organization and stress upon conformity in society; and sedentary agricultural and pastoral ecological settings. In contrast, more differentiated functioning, including relative field independence, are associated with encouragement of autonomy in the family, “loose” social structure and mobile hunting ecological settings. The small sex differences in field-dependence-independence, beginning in adolescence, repeatedly observed in Western studies are not universally evident in the non-Western data. Sex differences appear to be common in samples at the sedentary agricultural end of the ecological spectrum and less evident in mobile hunting samples. Sex differences also seem to be more prevalent in “tight” than in “loose” social settings.

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Citations
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Culture and systems of thought: holistic versus analytic cognition.

TL;DR: The authors find East Asians to be holistic, attending to the entire field and assigning causality to it, making relatively little use of categories and formal logic, and relying on "dialectical" reasoning, whereas Westerners are more analytic.
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Individualism and Collectivism: Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Self-Ingroup Relationships

TL;DR: The individualism and collectivism constructs are theoretically analyzed and linked to certain hypothesized consequences (social behaviors, health indices). as discussed by the authors explored the meaning of these constructs within culture within culture (in the United States), identifying the individual-differences variable, idiocentrism versus all-theory, that corresponds to the constructs and found that U.S. individualism is reflected in self-reliance with competition, low concern for groups, and distance from groups.
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Converging measurement of horizontal and vertical individualism and collectivism

TL;DR: The constructs of horizontal (H) and vertical (V) individualism (I) and collectivism (C) were theoretically defined and empirically supported by Triandis et al. as discussed by the authors.
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Field-Dependent and Field-Independent Cognitive Styles and Their Educational Implications

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented a method for extracting the structure of a set of binary codes from a single document. (University Microfilms No. 29, 4868B-4869B.s International, 1969, 29, 5.
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Endogenous Preferences: The Cultural Consequences of Markets and Other Economic Institutions

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Development and validation of ego-identity status.

TL;DR: 4 modes of reacting to the late adolescent identity crisis were described, measured, and validated; those in the status characterized by adherence to parental wishes set goals unrealistically high and subscribed significantly more to authoritarian values.
Book

Patterns of Culture

Ruth Benedict
TL;DR: In this paper, the aim of the anthropological study of primitive peoples is to discover the "configuration" of each -the cultural drive in group and individual which determines the characteristic reaction to stimulus in any and every situation in life.
Book

Cross-cultural research methods

TL;DR: Cross-cultural studies are necessary for the complete development of theories in environmental research as discussed by the authors since no one culture contains all environmental conditions that can affect human behavior, and no one country contains all possible types of man-made changes of the physical environment, nor all of the manmade adaptations to natural conditions such as climate, noise, air quality and potential hazards.
Book

The transparent self

Journal ArticleDOI

On cross‐cultural comparability

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a cadre of travail methodologique for the recherche interculturelle, which sinspire des discussions passees de certains anthropologues.
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