Title of article
Conversing Across Cultures: East-West Communication Styles in Work and Nonwork Contexts
Author/Authors
Choi، Incheol نويسنده , , Sanchez-Burks، Jeffrey نويسنده , , Lee، Fiona نويسنده , , Nisbett، Richard نويسنده , , Zhao، Shuming نويسنده , , Koo، Jasook نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
-362
From page
363
To page
0
Abstract
Four experiments provided evidence that East–West differences in attention to indirect meaning are more pronounced in work settings compared with nonwork settings as suggested by prior research on Protestant relational ideology. Study 1 compared errors in interpreting indirect messages in work and nonwork contexts across three cultures. Studies 2 and 3 examined differences in selfreported indirectness with coworkers versus nonwork acquaintances across three cultures controlling for variation in individualismcollectivism. Study 4 examined self-reported indirectness in bicultural managers and experimentally manipulated the salience of Western versus Eastern culture. The results showed that Americans, but not East Asians, were less attentive to indirect cues in work than nonwork settings and that East-West differences in indirectness were greater in work than nonwork settings.
Keywords
salmonids , starvation , muscle structure , re-feeding , connective tissue , Texture , collagen
Journal title
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
Record number
96999
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