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      Conversing across cultures: East-West communication styles in work and nonwork contexts.

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          Abstract

          Four experiments provided evidence that East-West differences in attention to indirect meaning are more pronounced in work settings compared with nonwork settings as suggested by prior research on Protestant relational ideology. Study 1 compared errors in interpreting indirect messages in work and nonwork contexts across three cultures. Studies 2 and 3 examined differences in self-reported indirectness with coworkers versus nonwork acquaintances across three cultures controlling for variation in individualism--collectivism. Study 4 examined self-reported indirectness in bicultural managers and experimentally manipulated the salience of Western versus Eastern culture. The results showed that Americans, but not East Asians, were less attentive to indirect cues in work than nonwork settings and that East-West differences in indirectness were greater in work than nonwork settings.

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          Relational schemas and the processing of social information.

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            The Influence of Relational Demography andGuanxi:The Chinese Case

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              Simpat?a as a cultural script of Hispanics.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
                Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
                American Psychological Association (APA)
                1939-1315
                0022-3514
                2003
                2003
                : 85
                : 2
                : 363-372
                Article
                10.1037/0022-3514.85.2.363
                12916576
                023a6efa-a9d7-4ad4-a36d-922115b9f276
                © 2003
                History

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