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Ethnicity and Contemporary U.S. Culture: A Meta-Analytic Investigation of Horizontal–Vertical Individualism–Collectivism. Jose H. Vargas, M.A. & Markus Kemmelmeier, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno April 24, 2009. Current Trends, Cultural Implications and Research Goals. Current Trends :
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Ethnicity and Contemporary U.S. Culture: A Meta-Analytic Investigation of Horizontal–Vertical Individualism–Collectivism Jose H. Vargas, M.A. & Markus Kemmelmeier, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno April 24, 2009
Current Trends, Cultural Implications and Research Goals • Current Trends: • Increasing cultural diversity • U.S. Census EurAm still majority population??? • In 2000 Census, Latinos surpassed AfrAm as largest minority group (12.5% vs. 12.3%, respectively) • Between 1990-2000, Latino pop increased 52.9% • In 2003, 35% of immigrants to U.S. came from Asian countries
Current Trends, Cultural Implications and Research Goals • Cultural Implications: • Traditionally, U.S. viewed as epitome of “individualism” (IND) • Given Census trends/cultural patterns potential gradual dissolution of IND???
Individualism–Collectivism • Triandis’ Conceptualization (1990s): • IND: emotional independence from collectivities • COL: emotional interdependence on collectivities • Accounts for power distance
Individualism-Collectivism (con’t) • Hor-Ver INDCOL—Four Subscales: • Horizontal Individualism (HI): • Autonomy and uniqueness • e.g., “My personal identity is very important to me” • Horizontal Collectivism (HC): • Social harmony and social equality • e.g., “My happiness depends very much on the happiness of those around me” • Vertical Individualism (VI): • Personal achievement and competition • e.g., “Competition is the law of nature” • Vertical Collectivism (VC): • Social hierarchies and subordination of personal needs to ingroup • e.g., “I usually sacrifice my self-interest for the benefit of my group”
Reported Differences in INDCOL among U.S. Ethnic Groups (con’t) *TWO IMPORTANT STUDIES* • Coon & Kemmelmeier’s Study (2001): • Interesting Results: • AfrAms/AsiAms score higher on COL than EurAms • AfrAms displayed highest IND scores • Conclusions: • Not all ‘U.S. minorities’ display same form/degree of IND and COL • Ethnic diff in INDCOL may be linked to ethnic groups’ unique histories
Reported Differences in INDCOL among U.S. Ethnic Groups (con’t) • Oyserman et al.’s Study (2002): • Most comprehensive meta-analysis on INDCOL to date • Findings from Within-U.S. Comparisons: • AfrAms were highest on IND (not EurAms) • EurAms and LatAms did not differ on IND • Only comparisons between EurAms and AsiAms display expected pattern (i.e., EurAms were higher on IND and lower on COL vis-à-vis AsiAms) • Implication of Study: may be premature to assume “all U.S. minorities” are collectivists
U.S. Ethnic Groups: Different Histories, Different Cultural Orientations • European American Sociohistory: • Traditional “carriers” of IND • African American Sociohistory: • Majority of current AfrAms are descendants of slaves • Asian American Sociohistory: • AsiAms emphasis on family (e.g., filial piety) • High degree of “assimilation” • Latino American Sociohistory: • LatAms descend from immigrants/native cultures • Strong familial leanings, religious influence & “work ethic”
Research Question and Goals • Central Research Question: • Are increases in cult. diversity promoting divergence or convergence of cult. orientations among ethnic/racial Americans? • Research Goals: • To address concerns about IND and COL among ethnic/racial Americans • Meta-analysis of Horizontal-Vertical IND-COL (HVIC)
Meta-Analysis • Inclusion Criteria: • Study uses INDCOL scale (Triandis & co.) • Study includes U.S. participants from at least 2 of the 4 ‘ethnic/racial groups’ • Study provides RELEVANT data on at least 1 of the 4 HVIC • Current Sample Size = 22 independent samples
Meta-Analysis (con’t) • Statistical Data: • Aggregated scale reliabilities (i.e., Cronbach’s α) • Aggregated mean differences (i.e., Cohen’s d) • Aggregated intercorrelations (i.e., Pearson’s r)
Results—Aggregated Subscale Reliabilities *Most mean weighted effect sizes (MWESs) exceeded alpha = .70 *Except for EurAm, non-sig Qwi stats suggest ‘homogeneity’ of MWESs *For all 4 groups, HC and VI scales function similarly
Results—Aggregated Mean Differences *Six “paired comparison types” *Only two stat sig. effects (in bold)
Results—Aggregated Intercorrelations *All but 4 ‘corr coefficients’ were stat sig. in positive direction *One ‘corr coefficient’ was stat sig. in negative direction *Data suggest that the 4 HVIC subscales are less ‘orthogonal’ than previously argued
Discussion—Conclusions • Reliabilities and Means suggest ethnic/racial similarity (e.g., HC & VI scales) • Some mean diff indicate few areas of cultural diff • Correlations suggest pervasive group diff in “scale links” • EurAms and AsiAms did not differ on either subscales, inconsistent w/ past research • Future research on INDCOL should link it to H-V and sociohistory
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