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2 - Equivalence and Bias: A Review of Concepts, Models, and Data Analytic Procedures

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

David Matsumoto
Affiliation:
San Francisco State University
Fons J. R. van de Vijver
Affiliation:
Universiteit van Tilburg, The Netherlands
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Summary

Introduction

This chapter addresses the methodological issues associated with equivalence and bias in cross-cultural research. These issues are a consequence of the nonexperimental nature of the research designs of cross-cultural studies. True experiments are based on the random assignment of participants to different experimental conditions, which presumably ensures that confounding variables are equated across experimental conditions. However, participants cannot be randomly assigned to cultures, and groups that are compared in cross-cultural studies can hardly ever be seen as matched on all background variables that are relevant for the constructs of interest. Cross-cultural psychology is not unique in the impossibility of matching groups; many studies in clinical and educational psychology involve situations in which intact groups are studied, and the assumption of the similarity of background characteristics across groups is unrealistic. The inability to conduct true experiments to address essential questions in cross-cultural psychology implies that we have to be careful in conducting our studies, being cognizant of relevant methodological knowledge and tools. It also implies that cross-cultural studies are always threatened by bias and inequivalence when cultural groups are being compared.

This chapter reviews the extant knowledge of these methodological issues. Our main message is that maximizing the validity of inferences should be the main concern of cross-cultural research and that methodological rigor in terms of establishing cross-cultural equivalence and suppressing bias across cultures plays a crucial role in this endeavor. We first describe a taxonomy of equivalence and bias, how they can be assessed, and the measures that can be taken to increase the validity of cross-cultural inferences. The second part gives an overview of procedures for adapting tests and survey questionnaires across cultures. Conclusions are presented in the final section.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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