Title of article :
Reasoning about modesty among adolescents and adults in China and the U.S.
Author/Authors :
Genyue، نويسنده , , Fu and Heyman، نويسنده , , Gail D. and Lee، نويسنده , , Kang، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
Reasoning about modesty was examined among adolescents and young adults in China and the U.S. Participants made moral judgments of story characters who did a good deed and either truthfully accepted credit for it, or falsely denied having done it. The social context in which statements occurred was manipulated, with some made in private and others in front of a class. Chinese participants judged accepting credit for good deeds less favorably and lying in the service of modesty more favorably than did participants from the U.S. In each country, older participants judged modesty-based lies more favorably when they were told in public. Additionally, a high collectivist orientation and low individualistic orientation was associated with higher ratings of modesty-based lying in public, which provides the first direct link between endorsement of these values and moral judgments about lie-telling.
Keywords :
Cross-cultural differences , social cognition , deception , collective behavior , audiences , impression management
Journal title :
Journal of Adolescence
Journal title :
Journal of Adolescence