Abstract

Three studies support the proposal that need for closure (NFC) involves a desire for consensual validation that leads to cultural conformity. Individual differences in NFC interact with cultural group variables to determine East Asian versus Western differences in conflict style and procedural preferences (Study 1), information gathering in disputes (Study 2), and fairness judgment in reward allocations (Study 3). Results from experimental tests indicate that the relevance of NFC to cultural conformity reflects consensus motives rather than effort minimization (Study 2) or political conservatism (Study 3). Implications for research on conflict resolution and motivated cultural cognition are discussed.

Authors
Jeanne Ho-Ying Fu, Michael Morris, S. Lee, Melody Chao, Chi-Yue Chiu, and Ying-Yi Hong
Format
Journal Article
Publication Date
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Full Citation

Fu, Jeanne Ho-Ying, Michael Morris, S. Lee, Melody Chao, Chi-Yue Chiu, and Ying-Yi Hong
. “Epistemic motives and cultural conformity: Need for closure, culture, and context as determinants of conflict judgments.”
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
vol.
92
, (February 01, 2007):
191
-
207
.