Emiko S. Kashima
La Trobe University
84 Papers
262 Citations
Emiko S. Kashima is an academic researcher from La Trobe University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mortality salience & Self. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 80 publications. Previous affiliations of Emiko S. Kashima include Swinburne University of Technology & University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.
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Papers
Differences Between Tight and Loose Cultures: A 33-Nation Study
Michele J. Gelfand,Jana L. Raver,Lisa Hisae Nishii,Lisa Art. Leslie,Janetta Lun,Beng-Chong Lim,Lili Duan,Assaf Almaliach,Soon Ang,Jakobina Arnadottir,Zeynep Aycan,Klaus Boehnke,Paweł Boski,Rosa Cabecinhas,Darius K.-S. Chan,Jagdeep S. Chhokar,Alessia D'Amato,Montse Ferrer,Iris C. Fischlmayr,Ronald Fischer,Márta Fülöp,James Georgas,Emiko S. Kashima,Yoshishima Kashima,Kibum Kim,Alain Lempereur,Patricia Márquez,Rozhan Othman,Bert Overlaet,Penny Panagiotopoulou,Karl Peltzer,Lorena R. Perez-Florizno,Larisa Ponomarenko,Anu Realo,Vidar Schei,Manfred Schmitt,Peter B. Smith,Nazar Soomro,Erna Szabo,Nalinee Taveesin,Midori Toyama,Evert Van de Vliert,Naharika Vohra,Colleen Ward,Susumu Yamaguchi +44 more
TL;DR: The differences across cultures in the enforcement of conformity may reflect their specific histories and advances knowledge that can foster cross-cultural understanding in a world of increasing global interdependence and has implications for modeling cultural change.
Culture and Language The Case of Cultural Dimensionsand Personal Pronoun Use
TL;DR: The authors examined the relationship between culture and language across 39 languages spoken in 71 cultures and found that cultures with pronoun drop languages tended to be less Individualistic than those with nonpronoun drop languages.
460
The development and validation of the Relational, Individual, and Collective self-aspects (RIC) Scale
TL;DR: In this article, a new scale measuring Relational, Individual, and Collective self-aspects (RIC) was developed and two samples of university students (N1 = 170, N2 = 214) were used to develop and refine the scale.
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Social Representations of Events and People in World History Across 12 Cultures
James H. Liu,Rebekah Goldstein-Hawes,Denis Hilton,Li-Li Huang,Cecilia Gastardo-Conaco,Emma Dresler-Hawke,Florence Pittolo,Ying-yi Hong,Colleen Ward,Sheela Abraham,Yoshihisa Kashima,Emiko S. Kashima,Megumi M. Ohashi,Masaki Yuki,Yukako Hidaka +14 more
TL;DR: The authors assessed social representations of world history using the open-ended questions, "What are the most important events in world history?" and "Who were the most influential persons in World History in the last 1000 years?" Data from 6 Asian and 6 Western samples showed cross-cultural consensus.
Do people believe behaviours are consistent with attitudes? Towards a cultural psychology of attribution processes.
TL;DR: This paper examined the relation of ABC beliefs to attitude attributions in a sample of Australian undergraduate students and found that the ABC beliefs of Australians were related to the extremity of attributions for unconstrained behaviours and the Australians had stronger ABC beliefs than the Japanese.
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