Publication | Closed Access
Collectivism-individualism in everyday social life: The middle kingdom and the melting pot.
299
Citations
21
References
1989
Year
Everyday Social InteractionSocial TheorySocial PsychologyRochester Interaction RecordSocial InfluenceSocial ChangeEveryday Social LifeCultural TheoryCultural StudiesSocial SciencesIntergroup RelationEthnocentrismMiddle KingdomStudent CultureHong KongLanguage StudiesSocial IdentityGroup InteractionApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheoryCollective SelfSocial CognitionCultureInterpersonal CommunicationMelting PotSocial RealitySocial AnthropologyCultural AnthropologySocial Diversity
Used the Rochester Interaction Record (RIR) to investigate the effects of individualism-collectivism on everyday social interaction. Triandis (in press) defined collectivism as placing great emphasis on (a) the views, needs, and goals of the in-group rather than of oneself, (b) social norms and duty defined by the in-group rather than behavior to get pleasure, (c) beliefs shared with the in-group rather than beliefs that distinguish oneself from in-group, (d) great readiness to cooperate with ingroup members, and (e) intense emotional attachment to the in-group. University students in the United States, an individualistic country, and in Hong Kong, which is highly collectivistic, maintained the RIR for 2 weeks. Consistent with predictions, the Hoog Kong students had longer but fewer interactions (half as many) with fewer people, had a higher percentage of group and task interactions, and indicated greater self- and other-disclosure.
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