dc.creatorBecker, Maja
dc.creatorVignoles, Vivian L.
dc.creatorOwe, Ellinor
dc.creatorBrown, Rupert
dc.creatorSmith, Peter B.
dc.creatorEasterbrook, Matt
dc.creatorHerman, Ginette
dc.creatorde Sauvage, Isabelle
dc.creatorBourguignon, David
dc.creatorTones, Ana
dc.creatorCamino, Leoncio
dc.creatorSilveira Lemos, Flavia Cristina
dc.creatorCristina Ferreira, M.
dc.creatorKoller, Silvia H.
dc.creatorGonzalez, Roberto
dc.creatorCarrasco, Diego
dc.creatorPaz Cadena, Maria
dc.creatorLay, Siugmin
dc.creatorWang, Qian
dc.creatorBond, Michael Harris
dc.creatorVargas Trujillo, Elvia
dc.creatorBalanta, Paola
dc.creatorValk, Aune
dc.creatorMekonnen, Kassahun Habtamu
dc.creatorNizharadze, George
dc.creatorFueloep, Marta
dc.creatorRegalia, Camillo
dc.creatorManzi, Claudia
dc.creatorBrambilla, Maria
dc.creatorHarb, Charles
dc.creatorAldhafri, Said
dc.creatorMartin, Mariana
dc.creatorMacapagal, Ma Elizabeth J.
dc.creatorChybicka, Aneta
dc.creatorGavreliuc, Alin
dc.creatorBuitendach, Johanna
dc.creatorSchweiger Gallo, Inge
dc.creatorOzgen, Emre
dc.creatorGuner, Ulku E.
dc.creatorYamakoglu, Nil
dc.date.accessioned2024-01-10T13:47:17Z
dc.date.available2024-01-10T13:47:17Z
dc.date.created2024-01-10T13:47:17Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.identifier10.1037/a0026853
dc.identifier1939-1315
dc.identifier0022-3514
dc.identifierMEDLINE:22288530
dc.identifierhttps://doi.org/10.1037/a0026853
dc.identifierhttps://repositorio.uc.cl/handle/11534/79253
dc.identifierWOS:000301884100011
dc.description.abstractThe motive to attain a distinctive identity is sometimes thought to be stronger in, or even specific to, those socialized into individualistic cultures. Using data from 4,751 participants in 21 cultural groups (18 nations and 3 regions), we tested this prediction against our alternative view that culture would moderate the ways in which people achieve feelings of distinctiveness, rather than influence the strength of their motivation to do so. We measured the distinctiveness motive using an indirect technique to avoid cultural response biases. Analyses showed that the distinctiveness motive was not weaker and, if anything, was stronger-in more collectivistic nations. However, individualism collectivism was found to moderate the ways in which feelings of distinctiveness were constructed: Distinctiveness was associated more closely with difference and separateness in more individualistic cultures and was associated more closely with social position in more collectivistic cultures. Multilevel analysis confirmed that it is the prevailing beliefs and values in an individual's context, rather than the individual's own beliefs and values, that account for these differences.
dc.languageen
dc.publisherAMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
dc.rightsacceso restringido
dc.subjectidentity
dc.subjectmotivation
dc.subjectculture
dc.subjectdistinctiveness
dc.subjectself-concept
dc.subjectINTERGROUP DISTINCTIVENESS
dc.subjectSOCIAL AXIOMS
dc.subjectUNITED-STATES
dc.subjectSELF-CONCEPT
dc.subjectUNIQUENESS
dc.subjectVALUES
dc.subjectUNDISTINCTIVENESS
dc.subjectDIFFERENTIATION
dc.subjectIDENTIFICATION
dc.subjectMULTIMETHOD
dc.titleCulture and the Distinctiveness Motive: Constructing Identity in Individualistic and Collectivistic Contexts
dc.typeartículo


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