Title of article
THE RELATION BETWEEN CULTURE AND RESPONSE STYLES Evidence From 19 Countries
Author/Authors
Timothy Johnson، نويسنده , , PATRICK KULESA ISR LLC YOUNG IK CHO، نويسنده , , SHARON SHAVITT، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
14
From page
264
To page
277
Abstract
The authors investigated at the country level the effects of four cultural orientations identified and studied by
Hofstede on two commonly recognized response biases: extreme response style and acquiescent responding.
Data are presented from approximately 18,000 survey questionnaires completed by employees in 19
nations on five continents (Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, India, Japan,
Malaysia, Portugal, Turkey, the United Kingdom, Mexico, the Philippines, Poland, Singapore, Hong Kong,
France, and Italy). Hierarchical linear modelingwas employed to examine the associations between personlevel
response styles and country-level cultural orientations. Consistent with theoretical expectations, power
distance and masculinity were found to be positively and independently associated with extreme response
style. Individualism, uncertainty avoidance, power distance, and masculinity were each found to be negatively
associated with acquiescent response behavior. Further research is needed to identify how question
characteristics might interact with cultural orientations to influence response behavior.
Keywords
Method bias , Acquiescence , Extreme response style , culture-level , Cross-cultural
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Record number
708213
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