Found 3 Hypotheses across 1 Pages (0.001 seconds)
  1. Cultures from the East tend to show more implicit persuasion than those of the West.Shen, Li - Culture and Explicitness of Persuasion: Linguistic Evidence From a 51-Year C..., 2022 - 2 Variables

    This study examines the explicitness of persuasion in cross-cultural communication using a corpus-based register analytical approach. The study compares 2518 speeches from 55 cultures in the East and West from 1970 to 2020 using Multi-Dimensional Analysis (MDA) to identify linguistic features related to persuasion. The results show significant differences between the East and West in terms of the overtness of persuasion, which is generally narrowing over time. The study suggests that political contexts may impact the cross-cultural gap in persuasion explicitness, and offers implications for further research on cultural styles of political persuasion.

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  2. The gap in persuasion explicitness between the East and West is closing.Shen, Li - Culture and Explicitness of Persuasion: Linguistic Evidence From a 51-Year C..., 2022 - 2 Variables

    This study examines the explicitness of persuasion in cross-cultural communication using a corpus-based register analytical approach. The study compares 2518 speeches from 55 cultures in the East and West from 1970 to 2020 using Multi-Dimensional Analysis (MDA) to identify linguistic features related to persuasion. The results show significant differences between the East and West in terms of the overtness of persuasion, which is generally narrowing over time. The study suggests that political contexts may impact the cross-cultural gap in persuasion explicitness, and offers implications for further research on cultural styles of political persuasion.

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  3. Countries from the East and countries from the West will cluster separately in terms of persuasion explicitness.Shen, Li - Culture and Explicitness of Persuasion: Linguistic Evidence From a 51-Year C..., 2022 - 2 Variables

    This study examines the explicitness of persuasion in cross-cultural communication using a corpus-based register analytical approach. The study compares 2518 speeches from 55 cultures in the East and West from 1970 to 2020 using Multi-Dimensional Analysis (MDA) to identify linguistic features related to persuasion. The results show significant differences between the East and West in terms of the overtness of persuasion, which is generally narrowing over time. The study suggests that political contexts may impact the cross-cultural gap in persuasion explicitness, and offers implications for further research on cultural styles of political persuasion.

    Related HypothesesCite