18 results on '"emic-etic"'
Search Results
2. Culture and Organizations: Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives
- Author
-
Fischer, Ronald, Ferreira, Maria Cristina, Gelfand, Michele J., book editor, and Erez, Miriam, book editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Feeling Capable in an Ubuntu Way: Kenyan Comprehensions of Control Beliefs Compared with the German Perspective
- Author
-
Heinecke-Müller Michaela, Quaiser-Pohl Claudia, Kariuki Priscilla W., and Arasa Josephine N.
- Subjects
control beliefs ,emic-etic ,ubuntu ,transcultural ,personnel psychology ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
In Western personnel psychology, control beliefs are a valued predictor for work-related outcomes. Yet, little is known about the culture-specific functioning of control in East Africa. Kenya, as an Ubuntu culture, is examined regarding control beliefs and contrasted with a German sample considered to represent an individualistic or Western culture. Responses to N=143 quantitative personality tests were attended with qualitative interviews on control beliefs (self-concept of ability, internality, powerful others, and chance). Content validity and factor structure of control beliefs were analyzed, followed by a Procrustean target rotation. Linear regression analyses were conducted to assess the predictability of job performance, achievement motivation, and well-being. Item comprehension, as well as factor structure of the four control aspects, differ between the two samples. In particular, the ‘powerful others’ control aspect diverges the most between the cultures. Linear regression analyses showed comparable, but not fully congruent predictability. Results indicate that an uncritical transfer of the control beliefs measure from one culture to another is inappropriate. Results fit in the picture of African Ubuntu philosophy, emphasizing social-relational aspects shaping control beliefs. More emic-etic based research is demanded concerning intra- and intercultural variability of control beliefs to depict a transcultural applicable and invariant model.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Gheirat as a Complex Emotional Reaction to Relational Boundary Violations: A Mixed-Methods Investigation.
- Author
-
Razavi, Pooya, Shaban-Azad, Hadi, and Srivastava, Sanjay
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE , *ETHICS , *EMOTIONS , *MUSLIMS - Abstract
People from different cultural backgrounds vary in how they define, perceive, and react to violations of relational boundaries. Muslim cultures are diverse and include nearly one in four people in the world, yet research on their relational and moral norms is scarce. We contribute to narrowing this gap by studying gheirat, a moral-emotional experience ubiquitous in Muslim Middle Eastern cultures. In four mixed-methods studies, we study how gheirat is experienced, what situations elicit it, and its social functions among Iranian adults (N = 1,107) using qualitative interviews, scenario- and prototype-based surveys, and an experiment. The prototypical experience of gheirat consisted of diverse appraisals (including sense of responsibility, insecurity, and low self-worth) and emotional components (including hostility, social fears, and low empowerment). We identified three types of relational violations that elicit gheirat: harm or insult to namoos (people and self-relevant entities one is obliged to protect), romantic betrayal by namoos, and intrusions by a third person. Each violation type led to a distinct variant of the prototype. Contrary to folk theories of gheirat, we did not find support for the idea that gheirat is a predominantly male experience. However, an experiment on the signaling effects of gheirat revealed that gheirat expressors are ascribed both positive and negative traits, but positive traits prevail for men and negative traits prevail for women. We discuss how the results contribute to a better understanding of Iranian social life and intercultural contact, as well as the implications for theories of emotion and the cultural logic of honor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Intergroup context‐sensitive adaptation and validation of the BIAS Map for measuring stereotypes of the Roma in Slovakia: The case for an emic‐etic mixed methods approach.
- Author
-
Lášticová, Barbara, Popper, Miroslav, Findor, Andrej, Hruška, Matej, and Petrjánošová, Magda
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE , *MINORITIES , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *RESEARCH methodology , *BEHAVIOR , *INTERVIEWING , *COGNITION , *QUANTITATIVE research , *STEREOTYPES , *SURVEYS , *QUALITATIVE research , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *MAPS , *FACTOR analysis , *EMOTIONS , *ETHNIC groups , *THEMATIC analysis ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
We report the process of adapting and validating the BIAS Map (Behaviors from Intergroup Affect and Stereotypes) used to measure perceived stereotypes and related social structure, emotions, and behavioral tendencies toward the Roma—Slovakia's most stigmatized ethnic minority group. In two surveys (Studies 1 and 4, n = 705) and group‐based (Study 2, n = 92) and individual (Study 3, n = 12) cognitive interviews, we integrated quantitative reliability, scalability, factor structure analysis, and qualitative inductive thematic analysis. We identified potential problems in the instruments' ecological validity and explored the limits of intergroup context‐specific interpretation to improve its psychometric properties. Besides developing a more reliable and valid measure, we make an argument for utilizing the emic‐etic mixed methods approach to enhance the intergroup context‐sensitive adaptation and validation procedure of universal measurement instruments in social psychology research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Exploring Perceptions of Advertising Ethics: An Informant-Derived Approach.
- Author
-
Shabbir, Haseeb Ahmed, Maalouf, Hala, Griessmair, Michele, Colmekcioglu, Nazan, and Akhtar, Pervaiz
- Subjects
ADVERTISING ethics ,SENSORY perception ,CONSUMER behavior ,CROSS-cultural studies ,EMIC & etic (Anthropology) - Abstract
Whilst considerable research exists on determining consumer responses to pre-determined statements within numerous ad ethics contexts, our understanding of consumer thoughts regarding ad ethics in general remains lacking. The purpose of our study therefore is to provide a first illustration of an emic and informant-based derivation of perceived ad ethics. The authors use multi-dimensional scaling as an approach enabling the emic, or locally derived deconstruction of perceived ad ethics. Given recent calls to develop our understanding of ad ethics in different cultural contexts, and in particular within the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, we use Lebanon—the most ethically charged advertising environment within MENA—as an illustrative context for our study. Results confirm the multi-faceted and pluralistic nature of ad ethics as comprising a number of dimensional themes already salient in the existing literature but in addition, we also find evidence for a bipolar relationship between individual themes. The specific pattern of inductively derived relationships is culturally bound. Implications of the findings are discussed, followed by limitations of the study and recommendations for further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Arab-Levantine personality structure: A psycholexical study of modern standard Arabic in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and the West Bank.
- Author
-
Zeinoun, Pia, Daouk-Öyry, Lina, Choueiri, Lina, and van de Vijver, Fons J. R.
- Subjects
- *
ARABS -- Psychology , *PERSONALITY , *PSYCHOLINGUISTICS , *LEXICON , *ARABIC language - Abstract
Objective: The debate of whether personality traits are universal or culture-specific has been informed by psycholexical (or lexical) studies conducted in tens of languages and cultures. We contribute to this debate through a series of studies in which we investigated personality descriptors in Modern Standard Arabic, the variety of Arabic that is presumably common to about 26 countries and native to more than 200 million people.Method: We identified an appropriate source of personality descriptors, extracted them, and systematically reduced them to 167 personality traits that are common, are not redundant with each other, and are familiar and commonly understood in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and the West Bank (Palestinian territories).Results: We then analyzed self- and peer ratings (N = 806) and identified a six-factor solution comprising Morality (I), Conscientiousness (II), Positive Emotionality (III), Dominance (IV), Agreeableness/Righteousness (V), and Emotional Stability (VI) without replicating an Openness factor.Conclusions: The factors were narrower or broader variants of factors found in the Big Five and HEXACO models. Conceptual and methodological considerations may have impacted the factor structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. “Am I as extended as you say I am?” Consumer’s emic perspectives on the extended self.
- Author
-
Stone, Tim, Gould, Stephen J., and Szabó-Douat, Teodóra
- Subjects
EMIC & etic (Anthropology) ,EMPIRICAL research ,MATERIALITY (Accounting) ,POLYSEMY ,LECTURES & lecturing ,MARKETING theory - Abstract
Although the extended self-construct has been widely investigated in consumer research, it has inspired relatively few critiques. Moreover, there has been little research which directly assesses consumers’ own emic perspectives on the extended self. Here, an empirical investigation is reported which explicitly solicits consumers’ own ideas and hermeneutically considers them in relation to etic researcher theory. The findings indicate a major theoretical blind spot: not only do consumers differ in the polysemy, that is, the various meanings and discourses they apply to the extended self but also that marketing theory should be revised to reflect this lack of universal understanding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. PerspektifInsider-Outsider dalam StudiAgama: Membaca Gagasan Kim Knott
- Author
-
Sujiat Zubaidi Saleh
- Subjects
insider-outsider ,doubt ,rapprochement ,emic-etic ,truth claim ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Islam ,BP1-253 - Abstract
This article contains a study of Kim Knott which gives a new offer in religious study. This is due to many universities store a number of constraints surrounding the study of religion. In addition, the occurrence of methodology stagnant in the students circumstance in applying explorative studies about religion. In this study, Knott tries to take eliminate the subjectivity element by aparting two basic problems; between emic perspective appeared from the studies of insider, and ethical perspective from outsider. In the end, Knott divides roles conceptions in empowering the social religious interconections into four elements; the pure participant, the observer as participant, the participant as observer, dan the pure observer. However, this pattern turns out to save a serious problem in the benchmark objectivity. Because the issue is whether the observer from outsider is excatly objective, reliable, and has scientific validity seen from the view of insider. In this regard, Knott tries to put both frameworks in the rapprochement method. This approach is an intersubjective solution to give a position of observer in the margin of appreciation as the border line between insider-outsider. With this approach, the religious study is expected will be more objective and distant from the subjectivity element.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. A Matter of Perspective?
- Author
-
Mostowlansky, Till and Rota, Andrea
- Subjects
- *
EMIC & etic (Anthropology) , *SOCIAL epistemology , *PERSPECTIVE (Philosophy) , *METHODOLOGY - Abstract
This article introduces the emic–etic debate in the scientific study of religion\s and provides a frame for the special issue’s six articles on the topic. Departing from the broader debate’s early history in the 1960s, this article contextualizes the emic–etic debate and locates its point of entry into the scientific study of religion\s in the 1980s. This article argues that in the course of the debate the insider–outsider and emic–etic complexes have become entangled. In order to facilitate an understanding of the debate, this article maintains that the emic–etic debate in the scientific study of religion\s touches upon three central dimensions (existential–political, methodological, and epistemological). In order to move toward a clearer methodological and epistemological framework, this article furthermore proposes an iterative model that locates insider–outsider at the level of observers and emic–etic at the level of categories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The emic–etic approach to personality measurement in personnel selection.
- Author
-
Ion, Andrei, Iliescu, Dragos, Ilie, Alexandra, and Ispas, Dan
- Subjects
- *
EMIC & etic (Anthropology) , *PERSONALITY , *JOB performance , *COGNITIVE ability , *PREDICTIVE validity - Abstract
The current study investigates the incremental validity of emic personality traits over etic traits and GMA in predicting job performance. Demographics, cognitive ability and personality data from two samples, of Chinese and Romanian workers from the same company, were collected and contrasted with performance data collected at two points in time. Etic personality constructs in the area of conscientiousness have criterion validity for both the Chinese and the non-Chinese sample. Emic personality dimensions don't have incremental validity over etic traits for the Chinese sample. Potential predictive bias associated with measures of cognitive ability and personality on a sample including Romanian and Chinese working adults was also investigated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A Matter of Perspective?
- Author
-
Mostowlansky, Till and Rota, Andrea
- Subjects
- *
EMIC & etic (Anthropology) , *RELIGIONS , *THEORY of knowledge (Religion) , *EXISTENTIALISM , *METHODOLOGY - Abstract
This article introduces the emic-etic debate in the scientific study of religion\s and provides a frame for the special issue's six articles on the topic. Departing from the broader debate's early history in the 1960s, this article contextualizes the emic-etic debate and locates its point of entry into the scientific study of religion\s in the 1980s. This article argues that in the course of the debate the insider-outsider and emic-etic complexes have become entangled. In order to facilitate an understanding of the debate, this article maintains that the emic-etic debate in the scientific study of religion\s touches upon three central dimensions (existential-political, methodological, and epistemological). In order to move toward a clearer methodological and epistemological framework, this article furthermore proposes an iterative model that locates insider-outsider at the level of observers and emic-etic at the level of categories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The common threads of national cultures.
- Author
-
Venaik, Sunil and Brewer, Paul
- Abstract
Copyright of Australasian Marketing Journal is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Studying Personality and Personality Disorders among People in the Caribbean Advocating for an Emic-Etic Approach.
- Author
-
Govia, I. and Paisley-Clare, V.
- Abstract
Copyright of West Indian Medical Journal is the property of West Indian Medical Journal (WIMJ) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2013
15. Translation as an Ecological Tool for Instrument Development.
- Author
-
Vinokurov, Andrey, Geller, Daniel, and Martin, Tamara L.
- Subjects
- *
QUALITATIVE research , *TRANSLATING & interpreting , *CROSS-cultural counseling , *ECOLOGICAL model (Communication) , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *COMMUNITY psychology , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
In this paper the authors outline the translation process involved in Macro International's evaluation of the Department of State's International Visitor Leadership Program (IVLP) in Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and Georgia. IVLP is a long-running program in which professionals and prospective leaders from around the world participate in funded short-term visits to the United States to learn first-hand professional practices and values of American society and democracy. The authors highlight the importance of attending to the theoretical issues in, discuss contextual factors inherent in, and outline specific phases of the translation process, and present the modified decentering translation technique adapted for the project. They describe the types of translation equivalencies that were addressed and present findings that attest to the quality of the translation. They underscore the importance of the translation process as a qualitative tool for the instrument development that maps the contexts of people's li es, documents emic-etic aspects of cross-cultural research, and fosters collaborations with all stakeholders of the research project. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. An Ethnographically Derived Measure of Anxiety, Depression and Somatization: The Phan Vietnamese Psychiatric Scale.
- Author
-
Phan, Tuong, Steel, Zachary, and Silove, Derrick
- Subjects
- *
ANXIETY , *MENTAL depression , *SOMATIZATION disorder , *MENTAL health , *CROSS-cultural psychiatry , *VIETNAMESE people - Abstract
This article describes the development and validation of the Phan Vietnamese Psychiatric Scale (PVPS). The PVPS was derived from Vietnamese idioms and cultural understandings of psychiatric and emotional distress identified from the Vietnamese literature and using ethnographic methods. The PVPS consists of a 26-item depression subscale, a 13-item anxiety subscale and a 14-item somatization subscale. Estimates of internal consistency for the three subscales ranged from .87 to .95, with 4-day interval test—retest reliability ranging from .81 to .89. Confirmatory factor analysis supported the subscale structure, with the depression subscale comprising two components ‘general mood disturbance’ and ‘psychovegetative symptoms.’ Multitrait—multimeasure analysis supported the construct validity of the scale. The PVPS demonstrated good criterion validity against case assignments by psychiatrists, naturalist healers, and structured diagnostic measures. The PVPS was rated as superior in clinical sensitivity and acceptability in comparison to other related measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. For A South-Relevant Psychometric
- Author
-
Anne Fromont, Isabelle Godin, Annalisa Casini, and Elias Mpofu
- Subjects
Ethnocentrism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,psychometric ,Applied psychology ,Self-esteem ,General Medicine ,Méthodes de recherche en psychologie ,Modernization theory ,Santé publique ,emic-etic ,Psychologie inter-culturelle ,cross-cultural psychology ,Cross-cultural ,Environmental impact assessment ,International psychological science ,Psychology ,WEIRD ,Reliability (statistics) ,media_common - Abstract
info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2018
18. Arab-Levantine personality structure: A psycholexical study of modern standard Arabic in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and the West Bank
- Author
-
Lina Choueiri, Fons J. R. van de Vijver, Lina Daouk-Öyry, Pia Zeinoun, and Rapid Social and Cultural Transformation: Online & Offline
- Subjects
Agreeableness ,Adult ,Male ,DIMENSIONS ,Social Psychology ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,TAXONOMIES ,050109 social psychology ,DESCRIPTIVE ADJECTIVES ,Big Five personality traits and culture ,Personality Assessment ,050105 experimental psychology ,Big Five ,Arab-Levant ,emic-etic ,CULTURE ,Middle East ,Young Adult ,Openness to experience ,Personality ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,LANGUAGES ,Big Five personality traits ,Lebanon ,media_common ,Aged ,Language ,ENGLISH ,Jordan ,Syria ,05 social sciences ,Conscientiousness ,Middle Aged ,language.human_language ,Arabs ,TRAIT ,PROSPECTS ,psycholexical ,Modern Standard Arabic ,language ,Emic and etic ,Female ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,BIG 5 ,Arab personality - Abstract
Objective: The debate of whether personality traits are universal or culture-specific has been informed by psycholexical (or lexical) studies conducted in tens of languages and cultures. We contribute to this debate through a series of studies in which we investigated personality descriptors in Modern Standard Arabic, the variety of Arabic that is presumably common to about 26 countries and native to more than 200 million people. Method: We identified an appropriate source of personality descriptors, extracted them, and systematically reduced them to 167 personality traits that are common, are not redundant with each other, and are familiar and commonly understood in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and the West Bank (Palestinian Territories). Results: We then analyzed self- and peer-ratings (N = 806) and identified a 6-factor solution comprising Morality (I), Conscientiousness (II), Positive Emotionality (III), Dominance (IV), Agreeableness/Righteousness (V), and Emotional Stability (VI) without replicating an Openness factor. Conclusions: The factors were narrower or broader variants of factors found in the Big Five and HEXACO models. Conceptual and methodological consideration may have impacted the factor structure. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2018
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.