6 resultados para Cross-cultural design


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Santamaría, José Miguel; Pajares, Eterio; Olsen, Vickie; Merino, Raquel; Eguíluz, Federico (eds.)

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Eterio Pajares, Raquel Merino y José Miguel Santamaría (eds.)

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Adapting a test between cultures or languages requires taking into account legal, linguistic, metric, and use-related considerations. Significantly more attention has been paid to the methodological aspects involved in the study of metric equivalence than to judgmental-analytical procedures prior to the empirical confirmation stage. However, considering the latter is crucial in the adaptation process. Along these lines, this paper seeks to describe and focus on the relevance of the previous stages, thereby offering a systematization process that comprises ten sections. This approach contributes to ensuring the construction of a test adapted and equivalent in as much as possible to the original. This process is exemplified by means of a Spanish language adaptation of a cognitive test originally designed in Portuguese for the Portuguese population, the Reasoning Test Battery. Copyright (C) 2013, Konrad Lorenz University Foundation. Published by Elsevier Espana, S.L.U.

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Editores:Micaela Muñoz-Calvo; Carmen Buesa-Gómez

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Il y a aussi des chapitres en français. There are also chapters in English. Cap. 1. El complicado arte de exponer. Iñaki Arrieta Urtizberea. Cap. 2. “Esta exposición no es para este museo”. Las salas permanentes del Museu Valencià d’Etnologia. Joan Segui. Cap. 3. Debunking, Decentralizing and Dissonance: Cultural Jamming @ Museum of Vancouver. Viviane Gosselin. Cap. 4. L’exposition des objets de cultures autochtones aujourd’hui, gain ou perte de sens? Le cas de l’exposition « C’est notre histoire... » au Musée de la civilisation de Québec. Daniel Arsenault et Nadine Desbiens. Cap. 5. El Born de Barcelona: exposiciones conmemorativas, límites, problemas y desafíos. Francesc Xavier Hernàndez Cardona. Cap. 6. Silencios y omisiones: narrando y exhibiendo la historia nacional. Magdalena Mieri. Cap. 7. Exhibiting the Commons. The Case of Tensta konsthall. Haizea Barcenilla Garcia. Cap. 8. Interactividad y patrimonio. Retos, tendencias y líneas de futuro. Núria Serrat Antolí.

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Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Survey (WHS) involving 6,902 university students in 37 countries evaluating 40 figures from world history. Multidimensional scaling and factor analysis techniques found only limited forms of universality in evaluations across Western, Catholic/Orthodox, Muslim, and Asian country clusters. The highest consensus across cultures involved scientific innovators, with Einstein having the most positive evaluation overall. Peaceful humanitarians like Mother Theresa and Gandhi followed. There was much less cross-cultural consistency in the evaluation of negative figures, led by Hitler, Osama bin Laden, and Saddam Hussein. After more traditional empirical methods (e.g., factor analysis) failed to identify meaningful cross-cultural patterns, Latent Profile Analysis (LPA) was used to identify four global representational profiles: Secular and Religious Idealists were overwhelmingly prevalent in Christian countries, and Political Realists were common in Muslim and Asian countries. We discuss possible consequences and interpretations of these different representational profiles.