Cross-Cultural Differences in a Global “Survey of World Views”

Gerard Saucier, Judith Kenner, Kathryn Iurino, Philippe Bou Malham, Zhuo Chen, Amber Gayle Thalmayer, Markus Kemmelmeier, William Tov, Rachid Boutti, Henok Metaferia, Banu Çankaya, Khairul Anwar Mastor, Kung Yu Hsu, Rongxian Wu, M. Maniruzzaman, Janvier Rugira, Ioannis Tsaousis, Oleg Sosnyuk, Jyoti Regmi Adhikary, Katarzyna SkrzypińskaBoonmee Poungpet, John Maltby, Maria Guadalupe C. Salanga, Adriana Racca, Atsushi Oshio, Elsie Italia, Anastassiya Kovaleva, Masanobu Nakatsugawa, Fabia Morales-Vives, Victor M. Ruiz, Ricardo A. Braun Gutierrez, Anindita Sarkar, Tripti Deo, Lenah Sambu, Elizabeth Huisa Veria, Marilia Ferreira Dela Coleta, S. G. Kiama, Soraj Hongladoram, Robbin Derry, Héctor Zazueta Beltrán, T. K. Peng, Matthias Wilde, Fr Arul Ananda, Sarmila Banerjee, Mahmut Bayazit, Serenity Joo, Hong Zhang, Ekaterina Orel, Boris Bizumic, Seraphine Shen-Miller, Sean Watts, Marcos Emanoel Pereira, Ernesto Gore, Doug Wilson, Daniel Pope, Bekele Gutema, Hani Henry, Jovi Clemente Dacanay, Jerry Dixon, Nils Köbis, Jose Luque, Jackie Hood, Dipti Chakravorty, Ananda Mohan Pal, Laysee Ong, Angela Leung, Carlos Altschul

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

79 Scopus citations

Abstract

© The Author(s) 2014. We know that there are cross-cultural differences in psychological variables, such as individualism/collectivism. But it has not been clear which of these variables show relatively the greatest differences. The Survey of World Views project operated from the premise that such issues are best addressed in a diverse sampling of countries representing a majority of the world’s population, with a very large range of item-content. Data were collected online from 8,883 individuals (almost entirely college students based on local publicizing efforts) in 33 countries that constitute more than two third of the world’s population, using items drawn from measures of nearly 50 variables. This report focuses on the broadest patterns evident in item data. The largest differences were not in those contents most frequently emphasized in cross-cultural psychology (e.g., values, social axioms, cultural tightness), but instead in contents involving religion, regularity-norm behaviors, family roles and living arrangements, and ethnonationalism. Content not often studied cross-culturally (e.g., materialism, Machiavellianism, isms dimensions, moral foundations) demonstrated moderate-magnitude differences. Further studies are needed to refine such conclusions, but indications are that cross-cultural psychology may benefit from casting a wider net in terms of the psychological variables of focus.
Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)53-70
Number of pages18
JournalJournal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2015

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