Cross-Cultural Analysis of Volition: Action Orientation Is Associated With Less Anxious Motive Enactment and Greater Well-Being in Germany, New Zealand, and Bangladesh

Background: People differ in action vs. state orientation, that is, in the capacity for volitional action control. Prior research has shown that people who are action-rather than state-oriented are better able to perceive and satisfy own motives (e.g., affiliation, achievement, power), which transla...

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Main Authors: Monischa B. Chatterjee, Nicola Baumann, Danny Osborne, Shamsul H. Mahmud, Sander L. Koole
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01043/full
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spelling doaj-baa1afcc8ce242d1a9fcf997d8594c122020-11-25T01:03:10ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782018-06-01910.3389/fpsyg.2018.01043364764Cross-Cultural Analysis of Volition: Action Orientation Is Associated With Less Anxious Motive Enactment and Greater Well-Being in Germany, New Zealand, and BangladeshMonischa B. Chatterjee0Nicola Baumann1Danny Osborne2Shamsul H. Mahmud3Sander L. Koole4Differential Psychology, Personality Psychology and Psychological, University of Trier, Trier, GermanyDifferential Psychology, Personality Psychology and Psychological, University of Trier, Trier, GermanySchool of Psychology, University of Auckland, Auckland, New ZealandDepartment of Psychology, University of Dhaka, Dhaka, BangladeshFaculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences, Clinical Psychology, and Mental Health, VU University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, NetherlandsBackground: People differ in action vs. state orientation, that is, in the capacity for volitional action control. Prior research has shown that people who are action-rather than state-oriented are better able to perceive and satisfy own motives (e.g., affiliation, achievement, power), which translates into greater psychological well-being (Baumann et al., 2005; Baumann and Quirin, 2006). However, most of the extant literature has been limited to samples from European countries or the US. To address this shortcoming, the present paper investigated the associations between action vs. state orientation, psychological well-being, and anxious style of motive enactment among samples in Germany, New Zealand, and Bangladesh (combined N = 862).Methods: To examine the consistency of our results across countries, a multi-group structural equation model (SEM) was used to examine the associations between action orientation, anxious motive enactment, and well-being. Subsequent mediation analyses assessed whether anxious motive enactment mediated the relationship between action orientation and well-being across each of the three samples.Results: Across all three cultural groups, action orientation was associated with less anxious motive enactment and higher well-being. Moreover, mediation analyses revealed significant indirect paths from action orientation through less anxious motive enactment to well-being that were similar across the three samples.Conclusions: These findings suggest that individual differences in action vs. state orientation have a similar psychological meaning across Western and non-Western cultures.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01043/fullaction orientationvolitionmotive enactmentwell-beingcross-cultural psychology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Monischa B. Chatterjee
Nicola Baumann
Danny Osborne
Shamsul H. Mahmud
Sander L. Koole
spellingShingle Monischa B. Chatterjee
Nicola Baumann
Danny Osborne
Shamsul H. Mahmud
Sander L. Koole
Cross-Cultural Analysis of Volition: Action Orientation Is Associated With Less Anxious Motive Enactment and Greater Well-Being in Germany, New Zealand, and Bangladesh
Frontiers in Psychology
action orientation
volition
motive enactment
well-being
cross-cultural psychology
author_facet Monischa B. Chatterjee
Nicola Baumann
Danny Osborne
Shamsul H. Mahmud
Sander L. Koole
author_sort Monischa B. Chatterjee
title Cross-Cultural Analysis of Volition: Action Orientation Is Associated With Less Anxious Motive Enactment and Greater Well-Being in Germany, New Zealand, and Bangladesh
title_short Cross-Cultural Analysis of Volition: Action Orientation Is Associated With Less Anxious Motive Enactment and Greater Well-Being in Germany, New Zealand, and Bangladesh
title_full Cross-Cultural Analysis of Volition: Action Orientation Is Associated With Less Anxious Motive Enactment and Greater Well-Being in Germany, New Zealand, and Bangladesh
title_fullStr Cross-Cultural Analysis of Volition: Action Orientation Is Associated With Less Anxious Motive Enactment and Greater Well-Being in Germany, New Zealand, and Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Cross-Cultural Analysis of Volition: Action Orientation Is Associated With Less Anxious Motive Enactment and Greater Well-Being in Germany, New Zealand, and Bangladesh
title_sort cross-cultural analysis of volition: action orientation is associated with less anxious motive enactment and greater well-being in germany, new zealand, and bangladesh
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Background: People differ in action vs. state orientation, that is, in the capacity for volitional action control. Prior research has shown that people who are action-rather than state-oriented are better able to perceive and satisfy own motives (e.g., affiliation, achievement, power), which translates into greater psychological well-being (Baumann et al., 2005; Baumann and Quirin, 2006). However, most of the extant literature has been limited to samples from European countries or the US. To address this shortcoming, the present paper investigated the associations between action vs. state orientation, psychological well-being, and anxious style of motive enactment among samples in Germany, New Zealand, and Bangladesh (combined N = 862).Methods: To examine the consistency of our results across countries, a multi-group structural equation model (SEM) was used to examine the associations between action orientation, anxious motive enactment, and well-being. Subsequent mediation analyses assessed whether anxious motive enactment mediated the relationship between action orientation and well-being across each of the three samples.Results: Across all three cultural groups, action orientation was associated with less anxious motive enactment and higher well-being. Moreover, mediation analyses revealed significant indirect paths from action orientation through less anxious motive enactment to well-being that were similar across the three samples.Conclusions: These findings suggest that individual differences in action vs. state orientation have a similar psychological meaning across Western and non-Western cultures.
topic action orientation
volition
motive enactment
well-being
cross-cultural psychology
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01043/full
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