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  5. Cultural Influences on Cognitive Representations of Conflict: Interpretations of Conflict Episodes in the United States and Japan

Cultural Influences on Cognitive Representations of Conflict: Interpretations of Conflict Episodes in the United States and Japan

File(s)
Nishii18_Cultural_influences_on_cognitive_representations_of_conflict.pdf (423.75 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/75435
Collections
Faculty Publications - Labor Relations, Law, and History
ILR Articles and Chapters
Author
Gelfand, Michele J.
Nishii, Lisa Hisae
Holcombe, Karen M.
Dyer, Naomi
Ohbuchi, Ken-Ichi
Fukuno, Mitsuteru
Abstract

This article integrates theory from the cognitive tradition in negotiation with theory on culture and examines cultural influences on cognitive representations of conflict. The authors predicted that although there may be universal (etic) dimensions of conflict construals, there also may be culture specific (emic) representations of conflict in the United States and Japan. Results of multidimensional scaling analyses of U.S. and Japanese conflict episodes supported this view. Japanese and Americans construed conflicts through a compromise versus win frame (R. L. Pinkley, 1990), providing evidence of a universal dimension of conflict construal. As the authors predicted, Japanese perceived conflicts to be more compromise-focused, as compared with Americans. There were also unique dimensions of construal among Americans and Japanese (infringements to self and giri violations, respectively), suggesting that identical conflict episodes are perceived differently across cultures.

Description
This paper was the winner of the Best Empirical Paper Award at the 11th Annual Conference of the International Association of Conflict Management (1998). This paper was awarded Honorable Mention for the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues Klineberg Award (2001).
Date Issued
2001-01-01
Keywords
conflict episodes
•
cultural influences
•
negotiation
•
cognitive representations
•
United States
•
Japan
Related DOI
https://doi.org/10.1037/0021-9010.86.6.1059
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: © American Psychological Association. Final version published as: Gelfand, M. J., Nishii, L. H., Holcombe, K. M., Dyer, N., Ohbuchi, K-I., & Fukuno, M. (2001). Cultural influences on cognitive representations of conflict: Interpretations of conflict episodes in the United States and Japan [Electronic version]. Journal of Applied Psychology, 86(6), 1059-1074. doi: 10.1037/0021-9010.86.6.1059 Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.
Type
article

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