Found 2029 Hypotheses across 203 Pages (0.007 seconds)
  1. Social synergy will be negatively associated with interpersonal intensity, competition, aggression, and psychological distress (453).Gorney, Roderic - Cultural determinants of achievement, aggression, and psychological distress, 1980 - 5 Variables

    This study examines the interrelationships between achievement, aggression, psychological distress, competition and interpersonal behavior. Authors suggest that levels of achievement, aggression, and psychological distress are partly determined by corresponding levels of of competition and interpersonal intensity. Hypotheses are supported.

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  2. Interpersonal intensity and competition will be positively associated with achievement (indexed by social complexity), aggression, and psychological distress, as well as with one another (453).Gorney, Roderic - Cultural determinants of achievement, aggression, and psychological distress, 1980 - 5 Variables

    This study examines the interrelationships between achievement, aggression, psychological distress, competition and interpersonal behavior. Authors suggest that levels of achievement, aggression, and psychological distress are partly determined by corresponding levels of of competition and interpersonal intensity. Hypotheses are supported.

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  3. Achievement will not be associated with aggression, psychological distress, or social synergy (453).Gorney, Roderic - Cultural determinants of achievement, aggression, and psychological distress, 1980 - 4 Variables

    This study examines the interrelationships between achievement, aggression, psychological distress, competition and interpersonal behavior. Authors suggest that levels of achievement, aggression, and psychological distress are partly determined by corresponding levels of of competition and interpersonal intensity. Hypotheses are supported.

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  4. Societies with high levels of social synergy in combination with equivalent levels of interpersonal intensity and competition, will not have lower levels of achievement (453).Gorney, Roderic - Cultural determinants of achievement, aggression, and psychological distress, 1980 - 4 Variables

    This study examines the interrelationships between achievement, aggression, psychological distress, competition and interpersonal behavior. Authors suggest that levels of achievement, aggression, and psychological distress are partly determined by corresponding levels of of competition and interpersonal intensity. Hypotheses are supported.

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  5. Shame, upset, anger, and conflict will be positively correlated to loaning/giving water.Wutich, Amber - Water sharing is a distressing form of reciprocity: Shame, upset, anger, and..., 2022 - 5 Variables

    This paper investigates the emotional and social outcomes of water sharing within societies and suggests water sharing is a unique reciprocity act that results in negative emotional outcomes, rather than the usual prestige and rank. A questionnaire regarding water sharing and receiving was carried out across 20 sites, targeting 250 houses per community. The authors found that both water sharing and receiving resulted in more distress and conflict than those who shared less.

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  6. Shame, upset, anger, and conflict will be positively correlated to borrowing/receiving water. Wutich, Amber - Water sharing is a distressing form of reciprocity: Shame, upset, anger, and..., 2022 - 5 Variables

    This paper investigates the emotional and social outcomes of water sharing within societies and suggests water sharing is a unique reciprocity act that results in negative emotional outcomes, rather than the usual prestige and rank. A questionnaire regarding water sharing and receiving was carried out across 20 sites, targeting 250 houses per community. The authors found that both water sharing and receiving resulted in more distress and conflict than those who shared less.

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  7. Households that neither gave or received water in the past 4 weeks have lower odds of reporting shame, upset, anger, or conflict than households that did one or both.Wutich, Amber - Water sharing is a distressing form of reciprocity: Shame, upset, anger, and..., 2022 - 6 Variables

    This paper investigates the emotional and social outcomes of water sharing within societies and suggests water sharing is a unique reciprocity act that results in negative emotional outcomes, rather than the usual prestige and rank. A questionnaire regarding water sharing and receiving was carried out across 20 sites, targeting 250 houses per community. The authors found that both water sharing and receiving resulted in more distress and conflict than those who shared less.

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  8. "Dependence anxiety relates (negatively) with directness of adult aggression" (263)Allen, Martin G. - A cross-cultural study of aggression and crime, 1972 - 2 Variables

    The relationships of aggression and crime to variables of childhood experience, adult behavior, and social structure are cross-culturally analyzed.

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  9. "Directness of aggression relates inversely with overall (average) anxiety in childhood" (263)Allen, Martin G. - A cross-cultural study of aggression and crime, 1972 - 2 Variables

    The relationships of aggression and crime to variables of childhood experience, adult behavior, and social structure are cross-culturally analyzed.

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  10. Societal preference for benevolence will be positively associated with favorable attitudes toward private propertyRudmin, Floyd Webster - Dominance, Social Control, and Ownership: A History and a Cross-Cultural Stu..., 1988 - 2 Variables

    In this article, the author seeks to correlate interpersonal values with attitudes toward private property. After giving a brief intellectual history on the philosophy of private property, the author draws data from the Multinational Student Survey (MSS) in order to discern attitudes towards private property and preferences for one of six psychological constructs (Support, Conformity, Recognition, Independence, Benevolence, Leadership) which were outlined in the Survey of Interpersonal Values which was itself incorporated in the aforementioned MSS. These measures were then edited in order to be correlated and the reliability of each was verified. The strongest correlations that resulted were for dominance and nonconformity. The author concludes without a theory of how to reckon with these seemingly paradoxical results.

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