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Bardo, John – Sociology and Social Research, 1976
Describing the possible effects of using pre-built attitude scales in cross-cultural research, this paper tests the validity of certain assumptions underlying use of pre-constructed Likert-type attitude scales on populations other than the one on which the scale was constructed. (Author/JC)
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences
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Turnage, Thomas W.; McGinnies, Elliott – American Journal of Psychology, 1973
The present study was undertaken to explore the influence of language (Chinese or English), meaningfulness, and mode of stimulus presentation on serial learning. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Chinese, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences, English
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Ciborowski, Tom; Cole, Michael – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1973
Taken together, these five studies using structurally different kinds of conceptual problems provide evidence for qualitative developmental and cultural differences in classificatory behavior. (Authors/CB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Concept Formation, Cross Cultural Studies
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Ciborowski, Tom; Cole, Michael – Child Development, 1972
Two concept-formation experiments were conducted with groups of American and Liberian Ss differing in age and educational background. (Authors)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Concept Formation, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences
Caudill, William – 1969
Why do American infants have a greater amount of vocalization, and particularly of happy vocalization, than do Japanese infants? To answer this question, 30 Japanese and 30 American first-born, 3- to 4-month old infants equally divided by sex, and living in intact middle class urban families were observed in their homes on two consecutive days…
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Child Care, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences
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Harris, Dale B.; And Others – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1975
Aesthetic awareness of American and Japanese children grades one, four, seven, and ten was measured by indicated preference of one of two simultaneously projected color slides. (Author)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Charts, Children
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Winkelmayer, Richard; And Others – Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1978
Asked United States, British, and Mexican male students of college age to discriminate among three affective displays presented by 10 schizophrenic and 10 normal U.S. women. Significant main effects for diagnostic category, nationality of judge, and for the interaction of nationality and diagnostic category were obtained. (Editor)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Clinical Psychology, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences
Reeder, William W.; And Others – 1972
In order to illustrate the cross-culture applicability of Reeder's Theory of Beliefs, Disbeliefs, and Social Action and its usefulness in predicting and explaining social actions, studies conducted in communities in India, Sudan, Lebanon, northeastern United States, and western United States are examined. Using this theory, beliefs and disbeliefs…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Behavior Theories, Beliefs, Cross Cultural Studies
Price, Larry R.; Oshima, T. C. – 1998
Often, educational and psychological measurement instruments must be translated from one language to another when they are administered to different cultural groups. The translation process often necessarily introduces measurement inequivalence. Therefore, an examination may be said to exhibit differential functioning if the test provides a…
Descriptors: Certification, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences, Diving
Kagan, Spencer; Madsen, Millard C. – 1971
In this experiment designed to trace the development of rivalry in Anglo American and rural Mexican children, rivalry (behavior intended to lower the outcomes of a peer) was measured by 4 choice conditions wherein the rivalrous alternative in all conditions was the choice that left fewer rewards (marbles) to the chooser's peer. After all choices…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Anglo Americans, Children, Citations (References)
Kagan, Spencer; Madsen, Millard C. – 1970
Four experiments comparing behavior of children from Los Angeles, California, and Nuevo San Vicente, Baja California, Mexico, were conducted to analyze cooperative and competitive behavior of Anglo American city and Mexican rural children. Eighty children from each setting, 40 of age 7-9 and 40 of age 10-11, equally divided by sex, served as…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Anglo Americans, Children, Citations (References)
Beier, Ernst G.; Zautra, Alexander
The experiment discussed in this report investigates cross cultural ability to decode emotive meaning in extra-verbal vocal expressions of mood. The principal expectation of the study is that primitive mood expressions are understood in much the same way in all the countries tested. The moods depicted in the study--angry, sad, happy, flirtatious,…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences, Emotional Response
Turnage, Thomas W.; McGinnies, Elliott – 1970
The study investigates the effects of linguistic medium (English vs. Chinese), mode of stimulus presentation (visual vs. auditory), and noun frequency on short-term serial recall and serial learning. The results indicate that auditory input facilitates learning for American subjects but not for Taiwanese subjects, who learned somewhat faster with…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Chinese, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies
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Emler, Nicholas; And Others – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 1987
Designed to determine how children acquire beliefs about institutional roles and authority associated with them, this study focused on schools and the teacher's role. Students from France and Scotland aged between 7 and 11 years with contrasting socioeconomic backgrounds were interviewed, and class and national differences in beliefs were found.…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences, Developed Nations
Loomis, Charles P.; And Others – 1966
A number of hypotheses derived from sociological theory and from previous research concerning the potential collaboration of citizens of the United States and Mexico were tested. Included in the samples were 1,528 interviews from the United States general public; 306 interviews from rural persons residing in places of 2,500 or less in Michigan;…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Anglo Americans, Attitude Measures, Cross Cultural Studies
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