The impacts of culture on social support, communication values, and coping strategies

Date

2007-11-27T16:49:06Z

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kansas State University

Abstract

This study explored how people perceive and receive social support, react to stress, and value different communication skills across cultures. Three hundred and four American students and 134 Taiwanese students participated. It was predicted that Taiwanese students would utilize social support less and rely on internally targeted control strategies more than would American students. Conversely, it was predicted that both groups would equally favor comforting and ego support from friendship. The results, however, indicated that the groups did not differ on utilizing social support, and Americans favored ego support more than did Taiwanese. Since cross-cultural contacts are encouraged in many fields such as business and academia, the results have pragmatic implications for cross-cultural mutual understanding, international trading, and sojourners' adjustment training.

Description

Keywords

Social support, Cross-cultural, Communication, Coping

Graduation Month

December

Degree

Master of Science

Department

Department of Psychology

Major Professor

Donald A. Saucier

Date

2007

Type

Thesis

Citation