Found 3532 Hypotheses across 354 Pages (0.007 seconds)
  1. The socialization of female children is accomplished more easily than the socialization of males (4).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in the ease of socialization: an analysis of the efficiency ..., 1981 - 7 Variables

    This study examines differences in the ease of socialization for male and female children in preindustrial societies. Results support the hypothesis that the socialization of females is accomplished more easily than the socialization of males.

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  2. Societies tend to socialize boys more into acheivement and self-reliance and girls more into nurturance, obedience, and responsibility (581).Hendrix, Lewellyn - Instrumental and expressive socialization: a false dichotomy, 1985 - 7 Variables

    This study reanalyzes the work of Barry, Bacon and Child (1957) on sex differences in child socialization. The authors use factor analysis to determine if the results of the original study are consistent with results yielded using modern methods and computer analysis. Authors find that there is no one general dimension of male-female difference in socialization and that the conclusions of Barry, Bacon, and Child have little meaning.

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  3. Observation and imitation are the most common processes of cultural learning among pastoralists.Bira, Temechegn G. - Cultural Learning Among Pastoralist Children, 2023 - 1 Variables

    This paper examines patterns of cultural learning in pastoralist societies and compares them to those found in hunter-gatherer societies. The study analyzed 198 texts from 13 pastoralist cultures in the eHRAF World Cultures database and found that most cultural skills and knowledge were acquired in early childhood, with parents and non-parental adults as the primary sources of transmission. Teaching was the most common form of learning across all age groups, with minimal variation in transmission between different age groups. While similarities were found between the cultural learning patterns of pastoralists and hunter-gatherers, pastoralists were less likely to mention learning from peers and more likely to mention learning via local enhancement and stimulus enhancement. The importance of teaching did not increase with age in pastoralist societies, unlike in hunter-gatherer societies.

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  4. Male children will display higher mean levels of anxiety about self-reliance than female children (19).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in socialization anxiety, 1979 - 2 Variables

    Authors look for associations between the gender of children and several dimensions of socialization anxiety.

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  5. The relationship between subsistence technology and child training is affected by the type of enviornment in which a society is located (233).Welch, Michael R. - Environmental vs. technological effects on childhood socialization processes..., 1980 - 4 Variables

    The author expands on the findings of Barry, Bacon, and Child (1959), hypothesizing that type of environment is an intervening variable in the relationship between subsistence type and child training. A multiple classification analysis is used.

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  6. Female children will exhibit higher levels of anxiety related to performance of nurturant behavior than will male children (19).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in socialization anxiety, 1979 - 2 Variables

    Authors look for associations between the gender of children and several dimensions of socialization anxiety.

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  7. Mean levels of independence-related anxiety will be higher for males than for females (19).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in socialization anxiety, 1979 - 2 Variables

    Authors look for associations between the gender of children and several dimensions of socialization anxiety.

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  8. Individualistic countries will have more sex differences in moral judgments. Atari, Mohammad - Sex differences in moral judgements across 67 countries, 2020 - 2 Variables

    Using frequentist and Bayesian multi-level models in a sample of two international samples, the authors test whether there are significant sex differences in moral judgments across a large-scale examination of countries. They compare men and women using the five components of the Moral Foundations Theory: 1) care, (2) fairness, (3) loyalty, (4) authority, and (5) purity. In addition, they study the differences when considering socioeconomic and gender-equality status. The results partially support the presence of significant sex differences. While care, fairness, and purity were consistently higher for women; loyalty and authority were highly variable. The study also shows that there are larger sex differences in moral judgments across more individualist, WEIRD, and gender-equal societies.

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  9. Mean levels of achievement anxiety will be higher for male than for female children (19).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in socialization anxiety, 1979 - 2 Variables

    Authors look for associations between the gender of children and several dimensions of socialization anxiety.

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  10. Females will also display higher aggregate mean levels of responsibility-related anxiety than males (19).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in socialization anxiety, 1979 - 2 Variables

    Authors look for associations between the gender of children and several dimensions of socialization anxiety.

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