Proximal and distal honor fit and subjective well-being in the Mediterranean region
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Fit Honor concerns Honor values Mediterranean region Profile fit Response surface analysis Well-being
Date
2022-12-19Referencia bibliográfica
Kirchner-Häusler, A... [et al.] (2023). Proximal and distal honor fit and subjective well-being in the Mediterranean region. Journal of Personality, 00, 1– 17. [https://doi.org/10.1111/jopy.12803]
Sponsorship
European Research Council (ERC) European CommissionAbstract
Objective: People's psychological tendencies are attuned to their sociocultural
context and culture-specific
ways of being, feeling, and thinking are believed to
assist individuals in successfully navigating their environment. Supporting this
idea, a stronger “fit” with one's cultural environment has often been linked to positive psychological outcomes. The current research expands the cultural,
conceptual, and methodological space of cultural fit research by exploring the
link between well-being
and honor, a central driver of social behavior in the
Mediterranean region.
Method: Drawing on a multi-national
sample from eight countries circum-Mediterranean
(N = 2257), we examined the relationship between cultural fit in
honor and well-being
at the distal level (fit with one's perceived society) using response
surface analysis (RSA) and at the proximal level (fit with one's university
gender group) using profile analysis.
Results: We found positive links between fit and well-being
in both distal (for
some, but not all, honor facets) and proximal fit analyses (across all honor facets).
Furthermore, most fit effects in the RSA were complemented with positive
level effects of the predictors, with higher average honor levels predicting higher
well-being.
Conclusions: Our findings highlight the interplay between individual and environmental
factors in honor as well as the important role honor plays in well-being
in the Mediterranean region.