Loneliness and vertical and horizontal collectivism and individualism: A multinational study
Аутори
Schermer, Julie AitkenBranković, Marija
Čekrlija, Đorđe
MacDonald, Kristi Baerg
Park, Joonha
Papazova, Eva
Volkodav, Tatiana
Iliško, Dzintra
Wlodarczyk, Anna
Kwiatkowska, Maria Magdalena
Rogoza, Radoslav
Oviedo-Trespalacios, Oscar
Khanh Ha, Truong Thi
Kowalski, Christopher Marcin
Malik, Sadia
Lins, Samuel
Navarro-Carrillo, Ginnes
Aquino, Sibele
Doroszuk, Marta
Riđić, Ognjen
Pylat, Natalia
Özsoy, Emrah
Tan, Chee-Seng
Mamuti, Agim
Ardi, Rahkman
Jukić, Tomislav
Uslu, Osman
Martinez Buelvas, Laura
Liik, Kadi
Kruger, Gert
Чланак у часопису (Објављена верзија)
Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документуАпстракт
This paper investigates how horizontal and vertical individualism and collectivism predict self-report loneliness in addition to the variance accounted for by age and sex in 28 countries (N = 8,345). Horizontal and vertical aspects of individualism and collectivism had small but significant contributions to predicting loneliness. Horizontal-collectivism (for 19 country samples) and, to a lesser extent, horizontal-individualism (for seven country samples), significantly predicted lower loneliness scores. Vertical-individualism (for 16 country samples), and to a lesser extent, vertical-collectivism (for six country samples), predicted feeling more loneliness among our participants. Adjusted R2 values suggested that between 0.6% and 27.7% of self-report loneliness was predicted. These results suggest that those who value egalitarian social relations also tend to report being less lonely whereas those who value individuality and competitiveness endorse the loneliness items more. These resu...lts are of importance to those investigating and helping lonely individuals by appreciating the influence of perceived culture.
Кључне речи:
Loneliness / Collectivism / Individualism / Horizontalism-verticalismИзвор:
Current Research in Behavioral Sciences, 2023, 4Издавач:
- Elsevier
Колекције
Институција/група
IFDTTY - JOUR AU - Schermer, Julie Aitken AU - Branković, Marija AU - Čekrlija, Đorđe AU - MacDonald, Kristi Baerg AU - Park, Joonha AU - Papazova, Eva AU - Volkodav, Tatiana AU - Iliško, Dzintra AU - Wlodarczyk, Anna AU - Kwiatkowska, Maria Magdalena AU - Rogoza, Radoslav AU - Oviedo-Trespalacios, Oscar AU - Khanh Ha, Truong Thi AU - Kowalski, Christopher Marcin AU - Malik, Sadia AU - Lins, Samuel AU - Navarro-Carrillo, Ginnes AU - Aquino, Sibele AU - Doroszuk, Marta AU - Riđić, Ognjen AU - Pylat, Natalia AU - Özsoy, Emrah AU - Tan, Chee-Seng AU - Mamuti, Agim AU - Ardi, Rahkman AU - Jukić, Tomislav AU - Uslu, Osman AU - Martinez Buelvas, Laura AU - Liik, Kadi AU - Kruger, Gert PY - 2023 UR - http://rifdt.instifdt.bg.ac.rs/123456789/3725 AB - This paper investigates how horizontal and vertical individualism and collectivism predict self-report loneliness in addition to the variance accounted for by age and sex in 28 countries (N = 8,345). Horizontal and vertical aspects of individualism and collectivism had small but significant contributions to predicting loneliness. Horizontal-collectivism (for 19 country samples) and, to a lesser extent, horizontal-individualism (for seven country samples), significantly predicted lower loneliness scores. Vertical-individualism (for 16 country samples), and to a lesser extent, vertical-collectivism (for six country samples), predicted feeling more loneliness among our participants. Adjusted R2 values suggested that between 0.6% and 27.7% of self-report loneliness was predicted. These results suggest that those who value egalitarian social relations also tend to report being less lonely whereas those who value individuality and competitiveness endorse the loneliness items more. These results are of importance to those investigating and helping lonely individuals by appreciating the influence of perceived culture. PB - Elsevier T2 - Current Research in Behavioral Sciences T1 - Loneliness and vertical and horizontal collectivism and individualism: A multinational study VL - 4 DO - 10.1016/j.crbeha.2023.100105 ER -
@article{ author = "Schermer, Julie Aitken and Branković, Marija and Čekrlija, Đorđe and MacDonald, Kristi Baerg and Park, Joonha and Papazova, Eva and Volkodav, Tatiana and Iliško, Dzintra and Wlodarczyk, Anna and Kwiatkowska, Maria Magdalena and Rogoza, Radoslav and Oviedo-Trespalacios, Oscar and Khanh Ha, Truong Thi and Kowalski, Christopher Marcin and Malik, Sadia and Lins, Samuel and Navarro-Carrillo, Ginnes and Aquino, Sibele and Doroszuk, Marta and Riđić, Ognjen and Pylat, Natalia and Özsoy, Emrah and Tan, Chee-Seng and Mamuti, Agim and Ardi, Rahkman and Jukić, Tomislav and Uslu, Osman and Martinez Buelvas, Laura and Liik, Kadi and Kruger, Gert", year = "2023", abstract = "This paper investigates how horizontal and vertical individualism and collectivism predict self-report loneliness in addition to the variance accounted for by age and sex in 28 countries (N = 8,345). Horizontal and vertical aspects of individualism and collectivism had small but significant contributions to predicting loneliness. Horizontal-collectivism (for 19 country samples) and, to a lesser extent, horizontal-individualism (for seven country samples), significantly predicted lower loneliness scores. Vertical-individualism (for 16 country samples), and to a lesser extent, vertical-collectivism (for six country samples), predicted feeling more loneliness among our participants. Adjusted R2 values suggested that between 0.6% and 27.7% of self-report loneliness was predicted. These results suggest that those who value egalitarian social relations also tend to report being less lonely whereas those who value individuality and competitiveness endorse the loneliness items more. These results are of importance to those investigating and helping lonely individuals by appreciating the influence of perceived culture.", publisher = "Elsevier", journal = "Current Research in Behavioral Sciences", title = "Loneliness and vertical and horizontal collectivism and individualism: A multinational study", volume = "4", doi = "10.1016/j.crbeha.2023.100105" }
Schermer, J. A., Branković, M., Čekrlija, Đ., MacDonald, K. B., Park, J., Papazova, E., Volkodav, T., Iliško, D., Wlodarczyk, A., Kwiatkowska, M. M., Rogoza, R., Oviedo-Trespalacios, O., Khanh Ha, T. T., Kowalski, C. M., Malik, S., Lins, S., Navarro-Carrillo, G., Aquino, S., Doroszuk, M., Riđić, O., Pylat, N., Özsoy, E., Tan, C., Mamuti, A., Ardi, R., Jukić, T., Uslu, O., Martinez Buelvas, L., Liik, K.,& Kruger, G.. (2023). Loneliness and vertical and horizontal collectivism and individualism: A multinational study. in Current Research in Behavioral Sciences Elsevier., 4. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crbeha.2023.100105
Schermer JA, Branković M, Čekrlija Đ, MacDonald KB, Park J, Papazova E, Volkodav T, Iliško D, Wlodarczyk A, Kwiatkowska MM, Rogoza R, Oviedo-Trespalacios O, Khanh Ha TT, Kowalski CM, Malik S, Lins S, Navarro-Carrillo G, Aquino S, Doroszuk M, Riđić O, Pylat N, Özsoy E, Tan C, Mamuti A, Ardi R, Jukić T, Uslu O, Martinez Buelvas L, Liik K, Kruger G. Loneliness and vertical and horizontal collectivism and individualism: A multinational study. in Current Research in Behavioral Sciences. 2023;4. doi:10.1016/j.crbeha.2023.100105 .
Schermer, Julie Aitken, Branković, Marija, Čekrlija, Đorđe, MacDonald, Kristi Baerg, Park, Joonha, Papazova, Eva, Volkodav, Tatiana, Iliško, Dzintra, Wlodarczyk, Anna, Kwiatkowska, Maria Magdalena, Rogoza, Radoslav, Oviedo-Trespalacios, Oscar, Khanh Ha, Truong Thi, Kowalski, Christopher Marcin, Malik, Sadia, Lins, Samuel, Navarro-Carrillo, Ginnes, Aquino, Sibele, Doroszuk, Marta, Riđić, Ognjen, Pylat, Natalia, Özsoy, Emrah, Tan, Chee-Seng, Mamuti, Agim, Ardi, Rahkman, Jukić, Tomislav, Uslu, Osman, Martinez Buelvas, Laura, Liik, Kadi, Kruger, Gert, "Loneliness and vertical and horizontal collectivism and individualism: A multinational study" in Current Research in Behavioral Sciences, 4 (2023), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crbeha.2023.100105 . .