Universals and cultural diversity in the expression of gratitude

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http://hdl.handle.net/10138/253493

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Floyd , S , Rossi , G , Baranova , J , Blythe , J , Dingemanse , M , Kendrick , K H , Zinken , J & Enfield , N J 2018 , ' Universals and cultural diversity in the expression of gratitude ' , Royal Society Open Science , vol. 5 , no. 5 , 180391 . https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.180391

Title: Universals and cultural diversity in the expression of gratitude
Author: Floyd, Simeon; Rossi, Giovanni; Baranova, Julija; Blythe, Joe; Dingemanse, Mark; Kendrick, Kobin H.; Zinken, Jörg; Enfield, N. J.
Contributor organization: Department of Finnish, Finno-Ugrian and Scandinavian Studies
Date: 2018-05-23
Language: eng
Number of pages: 9
Belongs to series: Royal Society Open Science
ISSN: 2054-5703
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.180391
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/253493
Abstract: Gratitude is argued to have evolved to motivate and maintain social reciprocity among people, and to be linked to a wide range of positive effects-social, psychological and even physical. But is socially reciprocal behaviour dependent on the expression of gratitude, for example by saying 'thank you in English? Current research has not included cross-cultural elements, and has tended to conflate gratitude as an emotion with gratitude as a linguistic practice, as might appear to be the case in English. Here, we ask to what extent people express gratitude in different societies by focusing on episodes of everyday life where someone seeks and obtains a good, service or support from another, comparing these episodes across eight languages from five continents. We find that expressions of gratitude in these episodes are remarkably rare, suggesting that social reciprocity in everyday life relies on tacit understandings of rights and duties surrounding mutual assistance and collaboration. At the same time, we also find minor cross-cultural variation, with slightly higher rates in Western European languages English and Italian, showing that universal tendencies of social reciprocity should not be equated with more culturally variable practices of expressing gratitude. Our study complements previous experimental and culture-specific research on gratitude with a systematic comparison of audiovisual corpora of naturally occurring social interaction from different cultures from around the world.
Subject: COOPERATION
EVOLUTION
LANGUAGE
PROSOCIAL BEHAVIOR
RECIPROCITY
ROUTINES
THANKS
assistance
collaboration
cross-cultural
gratitude
reciprocity
social interaction
6121 Languages
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


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