The role of culture in altruism: Thailand and the United States

62 Thai and 56 U.S. college students were examined on altruism and helping behavior. Thai-Buddhist culture has traditionally taught the importance of prosocial behaviors. Participants were administered the Self-Report Altruism (SRA) Scale, a specially developed projective measure (Altruism Appercept...

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Main Authors: Paul D. Yablo, Nigel P. Field
Other Authors: Mahidol University
Format: Article
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/25136
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spelling th-mahidol.251362018-08-24T09:17:32Z The role of culture in altruism: Thailand and the United States Paul D. Yablo Nigel P. Field Mahidol University Pacific Graduate School of Psychology Psychology 62 Thai and 56 U.S. college students were examined on altruism and helping behavior. Thai-Buddhist culture has traditionally taught the importance of prosocial behaviors. Participants were administered the Self-Report Altruism (SRA) Scale, a specially developed projective measure (Altruism Apperception Test) and an indepth interview. Thais scored significantly higher than U.S. subjects on the SRA Scale (p < .001), and manifested a greater tendency to both offer altruistic projections on the AAT (p < .001) and report that they would personally help in such situations (p < .001). An exploratory, mediational analysis performed on the interview data of a subset of participants revealed that Thais appealed to religion as a reason for helping significantly more than Americans (p < .001), while Americans specifically mentioned religion was not a reason significantly more than Thais (p = .002). Findings suggest a relationship between socio-cultural-religious values and prosocial behavior in that Thai-Buddhist-affiliative-collectivistic society appears more altruistically-oriented than the American relatively more areligious achievement or individualistic-based society. Recommendations are that further studies be conducted to support the validation of the projective measure and explore the possible influence of the spirituality and individualism-collectivism constructs. 2018-08-24T02:17:32Z 2018-08-24T02:17:32Z 2007-01-01 Article Psychologia. Vol.50, No.3 (2007), 236-251 10.2117/psysoc.2007.236 13475916 00332852 2-s2.0-38949169820 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/25136 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=38949169820&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Psychology
spellingShingle Psychology
Paul D. Yablo
Nigel P. Field
The role of culture in altruism: Thailand and the United States
description 62 Thai and 56 U.S. college students were examined on altruism and helping behavior. Thai-Buddhist culture has traditionally taught the importance of prosocial behaviors. Participants were administered the Self-Report Altruism (SRA) Scale, a specially developed projective measure (Altruism Apperception Test) and an indepth interview. Thais scored significantly higher than U.S. subjects on the SRA Scale (p < .001), and manifested a greater tendency to both offer altruistic projections on the AAT (p < .001) and report that they would personally help in such situations (p < .001). An exploratory, mediational analysis performed on the interview data of a subset of participants revealed that Thais appealed to religion as a reason for helping significantly more than Americans (p < .001), while Americans specifically mentioned religion was not a reason significantly more than Thais (p = .002). Findings suggest a relationship between socio-cultural-religious values and prosocial behavior in that Thai-Buddhist-affiliative-collectivistic society appears more altruistically-oriented than the American relatively more areligious achievement or individualistic-based society. Recommendations are that further studies be conducted to support the validation of the projective measure and explore the possible influence of the spirituality and individualism-collectivism constructs.
author2 Mahidol University
author_facet Mahidol University
Paul D. Yablo
Nigel P. Field
format Article
author Paul D. Yablo
Nigel P. Field
author_sort Paul D. Yablo
title The role of culture in altruism: Thailand and the United States
title_short The role of culture in altruism: Thailand and the United States
title_full The role of culture in altruism: Thailand and the United States
title_fullStr The role of culture in altruism: Thailand and the United States
title_full_unstemmed The role of culture in altruism: Thailand and the United States
title_sort role of culture in altruism: thailand and the united states
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/25136
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