Cross-Cultural Research 2005 - Abstracts

Cross-Cultural Research 2005
TitleSubjectAuthors
Case studies in cultural control: John M. Roberts's four Southwestern men.Social sciencesChick, Garry, Gonzalez, Liliana
Color categories are culturally diverse in cognition as well as in language.Social sciencesRoberson, Debi
Color categories are not arbitrary.Social sciencesKay, Paul
Confidence judgments on color category best exemplary.Social sciencesJameson, Kimberly A., Alvarado, Nancy
Explaining basic color categories.Social sciencesHardin, Clyde L.
Explanation and color-naming research.Social sciencesDedrick, Don
Importance and descriptiveness of self-aspects: A cross-cultural comparison.Social sciencesCarpenter, Sandra, Karakitapoglu-Aygun, Zahide
Mapping the ethnic landscape: Personal beliefs about own group's and other groups' traits.Social sciencesBurton, Michael L., Greenberger, Ellen, Hayward, Craig
On the role of culture in color naming: Remarks on the articles of Paramei, Kay, Roberson, and Hardin on the topic of cognition, culture, and color experience.Social sciencesJameson, Kimberly A.
Reflection of women's status in speech frequency: A four-culture study.Social sciencesMunroe, Robert L.
Rethinking economic systems: A study of agricultural societies.Social sciencesPryor, Frederic L.
Singing the Russian blues: An argument for culturally basic color terms.Social sciencesParamei, Galina V.
So-called brightness in color ethnography: Potentials for LCD technology in fieldwork and categorization research.Social sciencesMacLaury, Robert E.
Social activism and disability rates in American Indian tribes.Social sciencesYoung, Frank W.
Sources of conflict between friends in Russia and the United States.Social sciencesSheets, Virgil L., Lugar, Robyn
The case for complementarities.Social sciencesRaybeck, Douglas
Why GRUE? An interpoint-distance model analysis of composite color categories.Social sciencesJameson, Kimberly A.
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