| Literature DB >> 28957447 |
Birol Akkuş1,2, Tom Postmes1, Katherine Stroebe1.
Abstract
Culture shapes individuals, but the measure<span class="Species">ment of cultural differences has proven a challenge. Traditional measures of cultural values focus on individual perceptions. We suggest that values are established and maintained within social communities of proximate others, such as the family and its social environment. Within such communities, values serve to maintain collective harmony whilst preserving individual agency. From a social-dynamic analysis of communities, we infer that community values of loyalty regulate individual commitment, values of honor regulate norm compliance, and values of group hierarchy maintain a division of labor. In addition, communities may regulate the ways in which individuals have independent agency. A new scale to measure these values was validated in four studies (N = 398, 112, 465 and 111) among Dutch (religious and non-religious), Turkish-Dutch, Surinamese and Turkish groups. Values and practices were measured at the level of the individual ('What do you value?') and at the level of the perceived community ('What does your community value?'). Results show that, unlike individual-level measures of individualism/collectivism, this scale has excellent reliability, differentiates between cultural groups, and has predictive validity for future (voting) behavior. This approach provides a new way of conceptualizing culture, a new measure of collectivism and new insights into the role of proximate others in shaping culture.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28957447 PMCID: PMC5619823 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0185725
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Structure of Community Collectivism.
Community Collectivism Scale–selected items with factor loadings and scale reliability.
| Level | Dimension | Item | Subscale α | Factors | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Community | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |||
| Honor | .80 | ||||||
| HC1: In my community it is considered a disgrace if there is gossip about you. | |||||||
| HC2: In my community, honor is the most important thing for people. | |||||||
| HC3: Our community monitors if people observe the unwritten rules. | |||||||
| HC4: In my community, members of the family feel responsible for preserving and protecting another family member’s honor. | |||||||
| Agency | .67 | ||||||
| AC1: In my community, you are responsible for the important choices in your life | |||||||
| AC2: In my community, everyone is responsible for their own life. | |||||||
| AC3: In my community striving for autonomy is considered good. | |||||||
| Loyalty | .74 | ||||||
| LC1: In my community people experience the problems of their family members as if they were their own problems. | |||||||
| LC2: In my community family ties are very strong. | |||||||
| LC3: People are expected to support their family members, even if they do not want to. | |||||||
| LC4: In my community you are expected to do what you can when a family member needs you. | |||||||
| Hierarchy | .82 | ||||||
| SHC1: In my community, it is generally believed that men have a more important voice than women. | -.26 | ||||||
| SHC2: In my community, your elders’ opinions are more important than your own opinions are. | |||||||
| SHC3: In my community people believe that older people have a higher status than the young. | |||||||
| SHC4: In my community you are expected to accept that some people in your family have more to say, and others less. | |||||||
| Honor | .77 | ||||||
| HP1 I would consider it a disgrace if there would be gossip about me. | |||||||
| HP2: Honor is the most important thing for me. | |||||||
| HP3: I monitor if people (from my community) observe the unwritten rules. | |||||||
| HP4: I feel responsible for preserving and protecting my family member’s honor | |||||||
| Agency | .72 | ||||||
| AP1: I am responsible for the important choices in my life. | |||||||
| AP2: I am responsible for my own life. | |||||||
| AP3: I consider striving for autonomy as good. | |||||||
| Loyalty | .73 | ||||||
| LP1: I experience the problems of family members as if they were my own problems. | |||||||
| LP2: My ties with my family are very strong. | |||||||
| LP3: I would support my family members, even if I wouldn’t want to. | |||||||
| LP4: I will do what I can when a family member needs me. | |||||||
| Hierarchy | .74 | ||||||
| SHP1: I believe men should have a more important voice than women. | -.28 | .38 | |||||
| SHP2: My elders’ opinions are more important to me than my own opinions are. | |||||||
| SHP3: I think that older people have a higher status than the young. | |||||||
| SHP4: I accept that certain people in my family have more to say than others | |||||||
Note: N = 393; Principal Axis Factoring with Promax-rotation: pattern matrix; Only factor loadings > .25 are shown, factor loadings > .40 are in boldface.
Explained variance for factor structure alternatives.
| Factor structure | Factors | Community | Personal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Honor | 8% | 14% | |
| Loyalty | 15% | 13% | |
| Hierarchy | 13% | 16% | |
| Agency | 15% | 15% | |
| g | 49% | 43% | |
| Honor | 9% | 11% | |
| Loyalty | 18% | 21% | |
| Hierarchy | 17% | 16% | |
| g | 56% | 52% |
Note: N: 393
Correlations of CCS-dimensions and indexes.
| Community | Personal | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Honor | Loyalty | Hierarchy | Agency | Collectivism | Honor | Loyalty | Hierarchy | Agency | Collectivism | ||
| Honor | 1 | .531 | .568 | .045 | .871 | .689 | .369 | .453 | .088 | .663 | |
| Loyalty | - | 1 | .374 | .284 | .747 | .432 | .693 | .216 | .324 | .562 | |
| Hierarchy | - | - | 1 | -.142 | .817 | .427 | .225 | .692 | -.089 | .592 | |
| Agency | - | - | - | 1 | .061 | -.067 | .268 | -.243 | .884 | -.037 | |
| Collectivism | - | - | - | - | 1 | .637 | .507 | .575 | .117 | .746 | |
| Honor | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | .430 | .533 | .003 | .867 | |
| Loyalty | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | .192 | .320 | .668 | |
| Hierarchy | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | -.183 | .766 | |
| Agency | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | .043 | |
| Collectivism | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | |
Note: n: 398 (Sample 1)
*: p < .05
**: p < .01.
Correlations between INDCOL95 and Community Collectivism subscales.
| Scale | CCS | Loyalty | Hierarchy | Honor | Agency | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ComCol | Per | Com | Per | Com | Per | Com | Per | Com | Per | |
| INDCOL95 | .48 | .51 | .38 | .37 | .38 | .36 | .42 | .45 | .20 | .31 |
| Horizontal Collectivism | .33 | .39 | .32 | .36 | .18 | .19 | .33 | .35 | .21 | .30 |
| Vertical Collectivism | .49 | .59 | .32 | .35 | .42 | .49 | .43 | .51 | -.14 | -.08 |
| Horizontal Individualism | .04 | -.03 | .08 | .04 | .02 | -.07 | -.01 | -.04 | .40 | .45 |
| Vertical Individualism | .38 | .35 | .26 | .20 | .34 | .29 | .33 | .31 | .13 | .24 |
Note: n: 390 (Sample 1)
**: p < .01
*: p < .05. Com: Community-level, Per: Personal-level.
Correlations between Community Collectivism subscales and Self-Esteem, and Life-Satisfaction measures.
| Scale | CCS | Loyalty | Hierarchy | Honor | Agency | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Com | Per | Com | Per | Com | Per | Com | Per | Com | Per | |
| Self Esteem | -.09 | -.18 | .17 | .15 | .-.21 | -.33 | -.14 | -.16 | .17 | .35 |
| Life Satisfaction | .05 | .04 | .16 | .17 | -.03 | -.05 | .01 | .05 | .18 | .16 |
Note: n: 414 (Sample 3)
**: p < .01. Com: Community-level, Per: Personal-level.
Means (SD) and effect sizes (Cohen’s d) of a priori dimensions and aggregate indexes of CCS and INDCOL’95 dimensions.
| Scale | Factor | Level | NL | TR | Effect Size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Honor | |||||
| Community | 2.83 a (.66) | 3.56b (.71) | .94 | ||
| Personal | 2.88 a (.71) | 3.33b (.73) | .60 | ||
| Loyalty | |||||
| Community | 3.33 a (.59) | 3.66b (.63) | .52 | ||
| Personal | 3.54 a (.58) | 3.74b (.64) | .32 | ||
| Hierarchy | |||||
| Community | 2.44 a (.70) | 3.23b (.64) | 1.00 | ||
| Personal | 2.46 a (.66) | 2.93b (.70) | .66 | ||
| Agency | |||||
| Community | 3.99 a (.48) | 3.93a (.60) | -.11 | ||
| Personal | 3.77 a (.47) | 3.80a (.56) | .05 | ||
| ComCol | 2.87 a (.49) | 3.48b (.53) | 1.03 | ||
| PerCol | 2.96 a (.48) | 3.34b (.54) | .69 | ||
| IndCol | 3.21a (.37) | 3.37b (.41) | .41 | ||
| Horizontal Collectivism | 3.41a (.53) | 3.51a (.51) | .19 | ||
| Vertical Collectivism | 2.83a (.56) | 3.08b (.64) | .41 | ||
| Horizontal Individualism | 3.55a (.61) | 3.58a (.67) | .05 | ||
| Vertical Individualism | 3.10a (.66) | 3.36b (.56) | .41 |
Note: NL: indigenous Dutch (n: 215), TR: of Turkish descent (n: 183); Negative effect sizes indicate that indigenous Dutch mean is higher than mean of participants of Turkish descent. Subscripts with different indices differ at (p < .05)
CCS means and effect sizes of non-religious Dutch vs other groups on Community Collectivism Scale.
| Factor | Level | Non-religious Dutch | prot. Dutch | Turks | Hindustani | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M (SD) | M (SD) | Effect Size | M (SD) | Effect Size | M (SD) | Effect Size | ||
| Honor | ||||||||
| Community | 2.82 (.74) | 3.08** (.70) | .35 | 3.51** (.71) | .93 | 3.35** (.75) | .78 | |
| Personal | 2.86 (.75) | 3.01 (.72) | .20 | 3.32** (.76) | .62 | 3.14** (.79) | .38 | |
| Loyalty | ||||||||
| Community | 3.33 (.54) | 3.66** (.59) | .61 | 3.74** (.73) | .75 | 3.63** (.78) | .55 | |
| Personal | 3.43 (.66) | 3.83** (.58) | .60 | 3.76** (.75) | .50 | 3.65* (.76) | .32 | |
| Hierarchy | ||||||||
| Community | 2.34 (.85) | 2.41 (.78) | .09 | 3.22** (.80) | 1.04 | 3.12** (.84) | .92 | |
| Personal | 2.26 (.86) | 2.48* (.76) | .25 | 2.93** (.97) | .78 | 2.66** (.77) | .46 | |
| Agency | ||||||||
| Community | 3.83 (.63) | 3.45** (.63) | -.59 | 3.53** (.72) | -.47 | 3.57** (.62) | -.40 | |
| Personal | 4.12 (.64) | 3.90** (.51) | -.35 | 3.86** (.69) | -.41 | 4.15 (.72) | .04 | |
| ComCol | 2.82 (.56) | 3.04** (.49) | .39 | 3.48** (.60) | 1.17 | 3.38** (.61) | 1.00 | |
| PerCol | 2.85 (.57) | 3.11** (.48) | .45 | 3.32** (.60) | .83 | 3.16** (.58) | .55 | |
Note: Mean difference significance is indicated by *: p < .05 and **: p < .01; Cohen’s D effect size with non-religious indigenous Dutch (n = 118) as reference group (mean and sd) versus orthodox-protestant indigenous Dutch (n = 116), of Turkish descent (n = 81) and of Hindustani Surinamese descent (n = 107); Negative effect sizes indicate that non-religious indigenous Dutch mean is higher than mean of participants of compared group.
Regression analysis: Behavioral intentions predicted by cultural identity and CCS.
| Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regression Coefficient (Standard Error) | Standardized Coefficient | Regression Coefficient (Standard Error) | Standardized Coefficient | Regression Coefficient (Standard Error) | Standardized Coefficient | Regression Coefficient (Standard Error) | Standardized Coefficient | |
| Protestant | .097 (.031) | .166 | .055 (.032) | .096 | -.050 (.031) | -.085 | .040 (.032) | .069 |
| Turkish | .205 (.034) | .321 | .135 (.036) | .211 | .083 (.033) | .128 | .120 (.037) | .184 |
| Hindustani Sur. | .186 (.031) | .318 | .126 (.033) | .215 | .098 (.031) | .166 | .128 (.034) | .217 |
| ComCol | .095 (.020) | .230 | .056 (.030) | .134 | ||||
| Com_Ag | -.038 (.018) | -.100 | -.006 (.020) | -.016 | ||||
| PerCol | .123 (.020) | .275 | .078 (.029) | .178 | ||||
| Per_Ag | -.062 (.018) | -.153 | -.060 (.021) | -.148 | ||||
| R2 (Δ) | .10 | .16 | .19 | .20 | ||||
| N | 458 | 433 | 442 | 420 | ||||
Note: Cultural identity represented as three dummy variables with non-religious Dutch as reference group; ComCol (mean of Honor, Loyalty and Hierarchy at Community level), PerCol (mean of Honor, Loyalty and Hierarchy at Personal level), Com_Ag (Agency at Community level) and Per_Ag (Agency at Personal level) centered at their means.; ΔR2 is expressed relative to Model 1.
†: .1< p < .05
*: p < .05
**: p < .01
Regression analysis: Individual behavioral intentions and those of other community members predicted by cultural identity and CCS.
| Behavioral intentions of other community members | Own behavioral intentions | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regression Coefficient (Standard Error) | Standardized Coefficient | Regression Coefficient (Standard Error) | Standardized Coefficient | |
| Protestant | .009 (.049) | .011 | .044 (.037) | .066 |
| Turkish | .257 (.057) | .267 | .096 (.043) | .129 |
| Hindustani Sur. | .065 (.052) | .075 | .154 (.039) | .230 |
| ComCol | .111 (.046) | .179 | .042 (.035) | .088 |
| Com_Ag | .051 (.032) | .087 | -.019 (.024) | -.043 |
| PerCol | -.004 (.045) | -.007 | .097 (.034) | .193 |
| Per_Ag | -.051 (.033) | -.086 | -.064 (.025) | -.139 |
| R2 | .13 | .17 | ||
| N | 419 | 420 | ||
Note: Cultural identity represented as three dummy variables with non-religious Dutch as reference group; ComCol (mean of Honor, Loyalty and Hierarchy at Community level), PerCol (mean of Honor, Loyalty and Hierarchy at Personal level), Com_Ag (Agency at Community level) and Per_Ag (Agency at Personal level) centered at their means.
*: p < .05
**: p < .01.
Value discrepancy: CCS differences between Community and Personal levels.
| Communal level minus Personal level | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cultural Identity | Loyalty | Honor | Hierarchy | Agency | Value Discrepancy |
| Non-religious | -.11 | -.04 | .08 | -.31 | -.04 |
| Protestant | -.15 | .07 | -.06 | -.45 | -.05 |
| Turkish | -.05 | .19 | .29 | -.34 | .13 |
| Hindustani Sur. | -.03 | .22 | .45 | -.60 | .21 |
| Full sample | -.09 | .10 | .17 | -.43 | .05 |
Note: N = 465
*: p < .05
**: p < .01; Value Discrepancy: Community level score minus Personal level score.