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Social axioms . A social axiom is a generalized belief which is central in a person's belief system, and its function is to enhance the survival and functioning of the person in his/her social and physical environment.. Why are social axioms useful to explain cross-cultural differences? . Beliefs are related to a variety of social behaviors.Social axioms should demonstrate more cross-cultural variability than concepts frequently used in explaining cultural differences, such as values..
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1. A Global Study of Social Axioms Kwok Leung
City University of Hong Kong
Michael Harris Bond
Chinese University of Hong Kong
2. Social axioms A social axiom is a generalized belief which is central in a person's belief system, and its function is to enhance the survival and functioning of the person in his/her social and physical environment.
3. Why are social axioms useful to explain cross-cultural differences? Beliefs are related to a variety of social behaviors.
Social axioms should demonstrate more cross-cultural variability than concepts frequently used in explaining cultural differences, such as values.
4. Identification of social axioms Western psychological literature
Qualitative research in Hong Kong and Venezuela
Open-ended questionnaire
Interview
Content analysis of popular songs, newspapers, magazines, and primary and secondary school textbooks
5. The Social Axioms Survey 182 items
Administered in Hong Kong and Venezuela
Both college students and adults in both sites
Factor analysis
6. Five factors Social cynicism
A negative view of human nature and social events
Reward for application
The belief that effort will lead to positive outcomes
Social complexity
Multiple solutions to problems and the uncertainty of events
Fate control
a deterministic view of social events
Religiosity (Previously named as Spirituality)
the existence of a supreme being and positive consequences of religions
7. Replication in U.S., Japan, and Germany 60 items short form created
Administered to college students
Confirmatory factor analysis
8. Round the world study Over 40 samples
Students (40 culture)
Adults (13 cultures)
Factor analysis based on a meta-analytic procedure
Normalize the correlation matrix for each culture
Average the matrices across cultures
Transform the average matrix into a correlation matrix again
9. Evaluate the factor solution across the two samples Highly similar factor structures across the two samples
High correlations between student and adult means for each factor
The student data is used as the sample size is larger
10. Social Axioms Factor Structure and
Summary Findings
11. Social Cynicism (CYN)
12. Social Complexity (PLEX)
13. Reward for Application (RA)
14. Religiosity (REL)
15. Fate Control (FATE)
16. Citizen Means of 40 Countries
17. Correlations with Social Indicators Social Cynicism
Life satisfaction (-.69)
View on leadership: Charismatic/value based (-.65)
Achievement via conformity (-.62)
18. Correlations with Social Indicators (Contd) Social Complexity
Other-referenced performance motive (-.60)
Percentage of showing interest in politics (.55) )
Percentage of GDP on Health (.41)
19. Correlations with Social Indicators (Contd) Reward for Application
Mate preference emphasizing mutual attraction, deemphasizing financial prospect (-.74)
Working hours per week (.51)
Sources of guidance - superiors (.49)
20. Correlations with Social Indicators (Contd) Religiosity
Importance of religion in life percentage of very important (.69)
Hedonic balance (positive negative affect) (.47)
Agreeableness (.59)
21. Correlations with Social Indicators (Contd) Fate Control
Suicide rate (.54)
Heart disease (.52)
Work ethic enjoyment of working hard (.-54)
22. Country-level analysis Factor analyze item means of 41 cultural groups
26. Future directions Convergent and discriminant validity with similar concepts
Origin of social axioms and their acquisition
Environmental and situational influence on social axioms
Behavioral consequences of Social axioms
Contrast with values its their impact on behaviors