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Human attribute concepts: Relative ubiquity across twelve mutually isolated languages


Saucier, Gerard; Thalmayer, Amber Gayle; Bel-Bahar, Tarik S (2014). Human attribute concepts: Relative ubiquity across twelve mutually isolated languages. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 107(1):199-216.

Abstract

It has been unclear which human-attribute concepts are most universal across languages. To identify common-denominator concepts, we used dictionaries for twelve mutually isolated languages -- Maasai, Supyire Senoufo, Khoekhoe, Afar, Mara Chin, Hmong, Wik-Mungkan, Enga, Fijian, Inuktitut, Hopi, and Kuna -- representing diverse cultural characteristics and language families, from multiple continents. A composite list of every person-descriptive term in each lexicon was closely examined to determine the content (in terms of English translation) most ubiquitous across languages. Study 1 identified 28 single-word concepts used to describe persons in all 12 languages, as well as 41 additional terms found in 11 of 12.
Results indicated that attribute concepts related to morality and competence appear to be as cross-culturally ubiquitous as basic-emotion concepts. Formulations of universal-attribute concepts from Osgood and Wierzbicka were well-supported. Study 2 compared lexically based personality models on the relative ubiquity of key associated terms, finding that one-and two-dimensional models draw on markedly more ubiquitous terms than do five-or six-factor models. We suggest that ubiquitous attributes reflect common cultural as well as common biological processes.

Abstract

It has been unclear which human-attribute concepts are most universal across languages. To identify common-denominator concepts, we used dictionaries for twelve mutually isolated languages -- Maasai, Supyire Senoufo, Khoekhoe, Afar, Mara Chin, Hmong, Wik-Mungkan, Enga, Fijian, Inuktitut, Hopi, and Kuna -- representing diverse cultural characteristics and language families, from multiple continents. A composite list of every person-descriptive term in each lexicon was closely examined to determine the content (in terms of English translation) most ubiquitous across languages. Study 1 identified 28 single-word concepts used to describe persons in all 12 languages, as well as 41 additional terms found in 11 of 12.
Results indicated that attribute concepts related to morality and competence appear to be as cross-culturally ubiquitous as basic-emotion concepts. Formulations of universal-attribute concepts from Osgood and Wierzbicka were well-supported. Study 2 compared lexically based personality models on the relative ubiquity of key associated terms, finding that one-and two-dimensional models draw on markedly more ubiquitous terms than do five-or six-factor models. We suggest that ubiquitous attributes reflect common cultural as well as common biological processes.

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Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:06 Faculty of Arts > Institute of Psychology
Dewey Decimal Classification:150 Psychology
Scopus Subject Areas:Social Sciences & Humanities > Social Psychology
Social Sciences & Humanities > Sociology and Political Science
Uncontrolled Keywords:Sociology and Political Science, Social Psychology
Language:English
Date:1 January 2014
Deposited On:07 Dec 2021 16:33
Last Modified:27 Nov 2023 02:39
Publisher:American Psychological Association
ISSN:0022-3514
Additional Information:This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record.
OA Status:Green
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1037/a0036492
  • Content: Accepted Version
  • Language: English