Authors
Anat Bardi, Shalom H Schwartz
Publication date
2003/10
Journal
Personality and social psychology bulletin
Volume
29
Issue
10
Pages
1207-1220
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
Three studies address unresolved issues in value-behavior relations. Does the full range of different values relate to common, recurrent behaviors? Which values relate more strongly to behavior than others? Do relations among different values and behaviors exhibit a meaningful overall structure? If so, how to explain this? We find that stimulation and tradition values relate strongly to the behaviors that express them; hedonism, power, universalism, and self-direction values relate moderately; and security, conformity, achievement, and benevolence values relate only marginally. Additional findings suggest that these differences in value-behavior relations may stem from normative pressures to perform certain behaviors. Such findings imply that values motivate behavior, but the relation between values and behaviors is partly obscured by norms. Relations among behaviors, among values, and jointly among values …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Bardi, SH Schwartz - Personality and social psychology bulletin, 2003