Title: The Many Dimensions of Culture
1The Many Dimensions of Culture
2Individualism-Collectivism Dimension
GREECE vs ILLINOIS
- Behave differently between the two groups
- interact more with ingroup gt outgroup
3GREECE vs ILLINOIS
- Act according to norm.
- What should I do? gt What would I like to do?
- Define themselves in more social terms.
- How much do you earn per month? is acceptable
for the Greece in the first encounter but not in
America.
4THE IMPORTANCE OF HOFSTEDES WORK
- Triandis is a psychologist
- The study of culture back then was not popular.
- This would not make sense in X culture
- - Some theories would not fit in some cultures
- The majority view was that culture is none of
our business. The minority view held that
culture is so pervasive that all psychology
should be a cultural psychology.
5CULTURE INSIDE THE PERSON
- Culture was thought of out there.
- A major turning point occurred when culture
started to be conceived of as inside the
person. - Out there VS Inside
- Cultural Psychology gtgt Cross-cultural psychology
gtgt not mainstream yet.
6THE TURNING POINT
- There are major cultural differences in
cognition, emotion, and motivation. - Psychologists suddenly realized that what was
considered universal in psychology is true only
in the West, eg., in Individualistic cultures it
is not valid everywhere. - Handbook of Industrial and Organizational
Psychology have to be changed so many times due
to other author being late and culture changed.
7THE CULTURAL AND INDIVIDUAL LEVELS OF ANALYSIS
- The emphasis on the distinction between the
cultural and individual levels of analysis. - Individualism and Collectivism was split into
many facets - These factors were no longer on the opposite.
- A person can be high in both collectivism and
individualism at the same time.
8THE DETRACTORS
- Detractors
- Creative VS Critical
- The perfect is the enemy of the good
- Hofstedes work has become the standard against
which new work on cultural differences is
validated.
9The most important dimension
INDIVIDUALISM and COLLECTIVISM
- There are scores of dimensions in cultural
variations - Primary
- Secondary
10Research
INDIVIDUALISM and COLLECTIVISM
- Difference in perceptions and behavior.
- Within culture, there are idiocentric and
allocentric individuals. - Tendencies towards idiocentrism or allocentrism
are influenced by many factors.
111. Difference in Perceptions and Behavior
- Collectivist
- Tendency to emphasize on context
- Behavior seen as due to external factors such as
norms and roles
-
- Individualist
- Tendency to emphasize on Content
- Behavior as due to internal factors such as
attitudes and personality.
122. Within culture, there are idiocentric and
allocentric individuals
- Idiocentrics
- Think, feel and behave like people in
individualist cultures - Individualist 35-100 idiocentrics collectivist
0-35 idiocentrics. - High in expressiveness, dominance, initiation of
action, aggressiveness, logical arguments,
regulation of flow of communication, eye contact,
teneded to finish the task, and had strong
opinions.
-
- Allocentrics
-
- Tend to behave like people in collectivist
cultures - Collectivist cultures have between 30-100
Allocentrics Individualist cultures have
somewhere in between 0-35 allocentrics. - High on accomadating and avoidance of argument,
and shift their opinions more easily.
133. Tendencies towards idiocentrism or
allocentrism are influenced by many factors
- Idiocentrics
- Increases with affluence, leadership roles, much
education, has done much international travel,
has been socially mobile. - Increases when a person has been greatly exposed
to western mass media or has been in western
culture for many years.
-
- Allocentrics
- Increases when a person has been financially
dependent on some ingroup, is of low social
class, has limited education, has done little
travel and has been socialized in a unilateral
family - Increases when a person usually stays in a
collectivist culture.
14POWER DISTANCE
An important cultural dimension
- The dimension interacts with individualism and
collectivism in interesting ways resulting the
following- - Horizontal individualism
- Vertical individualism
- Horizontal collectivism
- Vertical collectivism
15Implications for working in another culture
- In Individualist cultures, people were selected
based on individual attributes while in
collectivist cultures people were selected based
on group memberships. - There is more training in collectivist cultures
because people tend to be more loyal to the
organization.
16Implications for working in another culture
- Paternalism is a more common leadership style in
collectivist than in individualist cultures. - In collectivist cultures, bosses are more
involved in personal lives of employees. - Managers in collectivist cultures are not as
concerned with performance but rather
interpersonal relationships unlike managers in
individualist cultures are.
17Implications for working in another culture
- As countries become more affluent, their
populations become more individualist. However,
this change requires several generations.
- Individualism-collectivism dimension also has
some relevance when it comes to deception in
organizations. - Triandis et all found that people in vertical
collectivist cultures are likely to use deception
if it helps their ingroup. In the case of
vertical idiocentrics, competitiveness and the
need to be the best seem to be the factors that
increase the use of deception.
18UNCERTAINTY AVOIDANCE
Tight and Loose Cultures
- The tight and loose culture has some major
cultural differences. - - Tight Culture
- Many rules, norms, and standards for correct
behaviors - Eg. There are strict rules about how to smile or
bow - - Loose Culture
- Few rules, norms, and standards2
19UNCERTAINTY AVOIDANCE
- When people do not follow a rule, break the
norms, or ignore standard. - - Tight Culture
- People are likely to be criticized, punished,
or killed - - Loose Culture
- It does not matter.
- For a culture to be tight, it requires agreement
about norms and cultural homogeneity. - Normally, in cultures with high population
density, tightness is particularly functional.
20Example of Tight vs Loose Cultures
- Tight
- Japan
- Taliban (Afghanistan)
Hofstedes Uncertainty Avoidance is related to
tightness. In cultures high in UA, people want to
have structure, to know precisely how they are
supposed to behave.
21Other Dimensions of Cultural Variation
- Cultural Complexity and Tightness- looseness
relates to collectivism-individualism - Collectivist cultures tight and simple
- Individualist cultures loose and complex
- Masculinity-Femininity dimension
- Masculinity correlates with domestic political
violence.
22The Influences of Hofstedes Dimensions
- The Hofstedes dimensions are relevant to how
people function in industrial society. - Hofstedes dimensions influence psychological
processes and organizational behaviors in many
cultures. - The dimensions have generated many researches and
have been highly influential in all the social
science.