Cross-cultural differences in self-reported decision-making style and confidence


Autoria(s): Mann, Leon; Radford, Mark; Burnett, Paul C.; Ford, Steve; Bond, Michael; Leung, Kwok; Nakamura, Hiyoshi; Vaughan, Graham; Yang, Kuo-Shu
Data(s)

1998

Resumo

The Melbourne Decision Making Questionnaire (Mann, Burnett, Radford, & Ford, 1997) measures selfreported decision-making coping patterns. The questionnaire was administered to samples of University students in the US (N = 475), Australia (N = 262), New Zealand (N = 260), Japan (N = 359), Hong Kong (N = 281), and Taiwan (N = 414). As predicted, students from the three Western, individualistic cultures (US, Australia, and New Zealand) were more con® dent of their decision-making ability than students from the three East Asian, group-oriented cultures (Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan). No cross-cultural differences were found in scores on decision vigilance (a careful decision-making style). However, compared with Western students, the Asian students tended to score higher on buck-passing and procrastination (avoidant styles of decision making) as well as hypervigilance (a panicky style of decision making). Japanese students scored lowest on decision self-esteem and highest on procrastination and hypervigilance. It was argued that the con¯ ict model and its attendant coping patterns is relevant for describing and comparing decision making in both Western and Asian cultures.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/27850/

Publicador

International Union of Psychological Sciences/Taylor & Francis

Relação

DOI:10.1080/002075998400213

Mann, Leon, Radford, Mark, Burnett, Paul C., Ford, Steve, Bond, Michael, Leung, Kwok, Nakamura, Hiyoshi, Vaughan, Graham, & Yang, Kuo-Shu (1998) Cross-cultural differences in self-reported decision-making style and confidence. International Journal of Psychology, 33(5), pp. 325-335.

Direitos

Copyright 1998 International Union of Psychological Sciences/Taylor & Francis

Fonte

Division of Research and Commercialisation

Palavras-Chave #170100 PSYCHOLOGY #Decision-making #Coping patterns #Cross-cultural #Melbourne Decision Making Questionnaire
Tipo

Journal Article