2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.paid.2007.10.034
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Cultural differences in response styles: The role of dialectical thinking

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Cited by 231 publications
(213 citation statements)
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“…Collectivist cultures tend to show a bias away from extreme responding in general (e.g., Hamamura et al, 2008); it is possible that uncertainty interacts with these baseline preferences differently. Third, while these results support various uncertainty theories (c.f.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Collectivist cultures tend to show a bias away from extreme responding in general (e.g., Hamamura et al, 2008); it is possible that uncertainty interacts with these baseline preferences differently. Third, while these results support various uncertainty theories (c.f.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, crosscultural studies suggest that East Asians report lower self-esteem and hedonic well-being than European Americans (Boucher, Peng, Shi, & Wang, 2009;Hamamura, Heine, & Paulhus, 2008;Heine & Lehman, 1997;Lee & Seligman, 1997;Spencer-Rodgers et al, 2004;Steger, Kawabata, Shimai, & Otake, 2008). Given the expected relationship between SDT need satisfaction and well-being, we anticipated that perceived satisfaction of SDT needs would also be lower in dialectical cultures.…”
Section: Cultural Dimensions Sdt Needs and Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Our predictions regarding cultural differences in need satisfaction were largely inferred from the more extensive literature on cultural differences in well-being, in which lower dialecticism (or non-East Asian cultural membership) and greater individualism have been associated with greater self-esteem and hedonic well-being (Boucher et al, 2009;Hamamura et al, 2008;Heine et al, 1999;Heine & Lehman, 1997;Lee & Seligman, 1997;Sheldon et al, 2011;Spencer-Rodgers et al, 2004). Our finding that participants in the Asian cultures averaged lower on most of the measures of eudaimonic well-being and the well-being component was consistent with these studies and our mediation analyses again supported an interpretation in terms of dialecticism and independent selfconstruals.…”
Section: Cultural Differences In Need Satisfaction and Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To account for PDIF, respondents' self-ratings are recoded in comparison with their ratings on the vignettes using a nonparametric recoding algorithm (King et al, 2004;Tandon, Murray, Salomon, & King, 2003; see also further in the Method section below). The key benefit of using anchoring vignettes is that an external source of data (i.e., distinct from the substantive descriptive information enclosed in self-ratings) is used for estimating RS (Hamamura, Heine, & Paulhus, 2008). Correcting for RS is presumed to improve the psychometric qualities of the scale.…”
Section: Using Anchoring Vignettes To Assess Response Style and Corrementioning
confidence: 99%