Authors
Ethan Zell, Rong Su, Hong Li, Moon-Ho Ringo Ho, Sungjin Hong, Tarcan Kumkale, Sarah D Stauffer, Gregory Zecca, Huajian Cai, Sonia Roccas, Javier Arce-Michel, Cristina de Sousa, Rolando Diaz-Loving, Maria Mercedes Botero, Lucia Mannetti, Claudia Garcia, Pilar Carrera, Amparo Cabalero, Masatake Ikemi, Darius Chan, Allan Bernardo, Fernando Garcia, Inge Brechan, Greg Maio, Dolores Albarracín
Publication date
2013/9
Journal
Social Psychological and Personality Science
Volume
4
Issue
5
Pages
521-528
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
The current research examined whether nations differ in their attitudes toward action and inaction. It was anticipated that members of dialectical East Asian societies would show a positive association in their attitudes toward action/inaction. However, members of non-dialectical European-American societies were expected to show a negative association in their attitudes toward action/inaction. Young adults in 19 nations completed measures of dialectical thinking and attitudes toward action/inaction. Results from multi-level modeling showed, as predicted, that people from high dialecticism nations reported a more positive association in their attitudes toward action and inaction than people from low dialecticism nations. Furthermore, these findings remained after controlling for cultural differences in individualism-collectivism, neuroticism, gross-domestic product, and response style. Discussion highlights the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
E Zell, R Su, H Li, MHR Ho, S Hong, T Kumkale… - Social Psychological and Personality Science, 2013