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Individualism and collectivism: Cross-cultural perspectives on self-ingroup relationships.
2.9K
Citations
50
References
1988
Year
EthnicityPuerto RicoSocial PsychologyIndividual DifferencesEducationU.s. IndividualismCultural FactorSocial SciencesIntergroup RelationCultural DiversityCollectivism ConstructsSocial IdentitySelf-ingroup RelationshipsApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheoryCollective SelfCultureSociologyCross-cultural PerspectiveCultural Psychology
The individualism and collectivism constructs are theoretically analyzed and linked to hypothesized consequences such as social behaviors and health indices. The study investigates the meaning of individualism and collectivism within the U.S. by identifying idiocentrism versus allocentrism, and probes their limits using data from Japan, Puerto Rico, and Illinois student samples. A higher‑order factor analysis indicates that subordinating group goals to personal goals is the key dimension of U.S.
The individualism and collectivism constructs are theoretically analyzed and linked to certain hypothesized consequences (social behaviors, health indices). Study 1 explores the meaning of these constructs within culture (in the United States), identifying the individual-differences variable, idiocentrism versus allocentrism, that corresponds to the constructs. Factor analyses of responses to items related to the constructs suggest that UrS. individualism is reflected in (a) Self-Reliance With Competition, (b) Low Concern for Ingroups, and (c) Distance from Ingroups. A higher order factor analysis suggests that Subordination oflngroup Goals to Personal Goals may be the most important aspect of U.S. individualism. Study 2 probes the limits of the constructs with data from two collectivist samples (Japan and Puerto Rico) and one individualist sample (Illinois) of students. It is shown that responses depend on who the other is (i.e., which ingroup), the context, and the kind of social behavior (e.g., feel similar to other, attentive to the views of others). Study 3 replicates previous work in Puerto Rico indicating that allocentric persons perceive that they receive more and a better quality of social support than do idiocentric persons, while the latter report being more lonely than the former. Several themes, such as self-reliance, achievement, and competition, have different meanings in the two kinds of societies, and detailed examinations of the factor patterns show how such themes vary across cultures.
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