00:01
So this question is asking, collectivist cultures are to blank as individualistic cultures are to blank.
00:08
A, dispositional, situational, b, situational, dispositional.
00:14
C, autonomy, group harmony, d, just world hypothesis, self -serving bias.
00:22
So obviously, it's pretty respective in terms of its order.
00:26
And to go about this question, you really have to understand the differences between collectivistic and individualistic cultures.
00:35
And what's nice about this is that you could pretty much take a guess as to what they generally mean based on the actual word.
00:43
So looking at collectivist, you see this word collect, and that reminds me of, you know, when you're collectively doing something, you're doing things together or with other people.
00:54
However, in individualistic, you see the word individual, and it's very much alone, singular.
01:04
And that really kind of just says a lot about what it means, because collectivist cultures really emphasize the work of relationships.
01:16
So this collectivist culture is very relationship -oriented, while individualistic cultures, in addition to, to be emphasizing on individuals, it's more achievement oriented.
01:34
And this is expressing cultures that are more western.
01:38
So like here in the united states, canada, the uk, how collectivist cultures are more so seen in the cultures that really value family a lot, you know, significantly greater than western cultures.
01:54
That be in latin cultures, asian cultures, and african cultures.
02:01
So individualistic cultures really value or really are characterized by independent, while collectivist is interdependent.
02:14
And here you could see that because of that, it's more autonomous.
02:21
And then the word for collectivist to kind of oppose that would be group autonomy.
02:26
But when relaying this to social psychology terms and how we view or what we value, individualistic culture is very much, they have the tendency to commit the fundamental attribution error...