Cross-Situational Self-Consistency in Nine Cultures: The Importance of Separating Influences of Social Norms and Distinctive Dispositions

Author:

Locke Kenneth D.1,Church A. Timothy2,Mastor Khairul A.3,Curtis Guy J.4,Sadler Pamela5,McDonald Kelly5,Vargas-Flores José de Jesús6,Ibáñez-Reyes Joselina6,Morio Hiroaki7,Reyes Jose Alberto S.8,Cabrera Helena F.9,Mazuera Arias Rina10,Rincon Brigida Carolina10,Albornoz Arias Neida Coromoto10,Muñoz Arturo11,Ortiz Fernando A.12

Affiliation:

1. University of Idaho, Moscow, USA

2. Washington State University, Pullman, USA

3. Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Bangi, Malaysia

4. Murdoch University, Perth, Australia

5. Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

6. National Autonomous University of Mexico, Iztacala, Mexico

7. Kansai University, Takatsuki, Japan

8. De La Salle University, Manila, Philippines

9. University of Santo Tomas, Manila, Philippines

10. Catholic University of Táchira, San Cristobal, Venezuela

11. Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador, San Cristobal, Venezuela

12. Gonzaga University, Spokane, WA, USA

Abstract

We assessed self-consistency (expressing similar traits in different situations) by having undergraduates in the United States ( n = 230), Australia ( n = 220), Canada ( n = 240), Ecuador ( n = 101), Mexico ( n = 209), Venezuela ( n = 209), Japan ( n = 178), Malaysia ( n = 254), and the Philippines ( n = 241) report the traits they expressed in four different social situations. Self-consistency was positively associated with age, well-being, living in Latin America, and not living in Japan; however, each of these variables showed a unique pattern of associations with various psychologically distinct sources of raw self-consistency, including cross-situationally consistent social norms and injunctions. For example, low consistency between injunctive norms and trait expressions fully explained the low self-consistency in Japan. In accord with trait theory, after removing normative and injunctive sources of consistency, there remained robust distinctive noninjunctive self-consistency (reflecting individuating personality dispositions) in every country, including Japan. The results highlight how clarifying the determinants and implications of self-consistency requires differentiating its distinctive, injunctive, and noninjunctive components.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Psychology

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