Human Spatial Behaviour: The Spacing of People, Objects and Animals in Six Cross-Cultural Samples

Abstract This study examines the principles we apply, when people, objects and animals are to be organized in relation to other representatives of their kind. Most cross-cultural studies on personal space focus on cultural differences, but here we look for proxetics (universals) as well as proxemics...

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Published in:Journal of Cognition and Culture
Main Author: Høgh-Olesen, Henrik
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Brill 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156853708x358173
https://brill.com/view/journals/jocc/8/3-4/article-p245_4.xml
https://data.brill.com/files/journals/15685373_008_03-04_s004_text.pdf
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spelling crbrillap:10.1163/156853708x358173 2024-10-06T13:49:07+00:00 Human Spatial Behaviour: The Spacing of People, Objects and Animals in Six Cross-Cultural Samples Høgh-Olesen, Henrik 2008 http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156853708x358173 https://brill.com/view/journals/jocc/8/3-4/article-p245_4.xml https://data.brill.com/files/journals/15685373_008_03-04_s004_text.pdf unknown Brill Journal of Cognition and Culture volume 8, issue 3-4, page 245-280 ISSN 1567-7095 1568-5373 journal-article 2008 crbrillap https://doi.org/10.1163/156853708x358173 2024-09-09T04:17:11Z Abstract This study examines the principles we apply, when people, objects and animals are to be organized in relation to other representatives of their kind. Most cross-cultural studies on personal space focus on cultural differences, but here we look for proxetics (universals) as well as proxemics (cultural differences). 793 subjects from six countries (Greenland, Finland, Denmark, Italy, India and Cameroon) situated in four different climate zones are tested with a projective simulation measure (the 'IPROX'). A number of cross-cultural similarities are documented, and it is suggested that six of these are examples of high-level universals in the sense of Norenzayan and Heine (2005). But spacing also differs, and participants from Greenland, Finland, and Denmark systematically keep a larger interpersonal distance than subjects from Italy, India and Cameroon, which confirms the classic difference between southern 'contact-cultures' and northern 'low-contact cultures'. It is documented how personal space shrinks or expands depending on context and depending on whether a person occupies a territory or arrives at a territory occupied by somebody else. Personal space may even 'rub off ' on a person's belongings, and this opens up for a whole new area of spatial relations not studied before. Article in Journal/Newspaper Greenland Brill Greenland Heine ENVELOPE(167.450,167.450,-78.083,-78.083) Journal of Cognition and Culture 8 3-4 245 280
institution Open Polar
collection Brill
op_collection_id crbrillap
language unknown
description Abstract This study examines the principles we apply, when people, objects and animals are to be organized in relation to other representatives of their kind. Most cross-cultural studies on personal space focus on cultural differences, but here we look for proxetics (universals) as well as proxemics (cultural differences). 793 subjects from six countries (Greenland, Finland, Denmark, Italy, India and Cameroon) situated in four different climate zones are tested with a projective simulation measure (the 'IPROX'). A number of cross-cultural similarities are documented, and it is suggested that six of these are examples of high-level universals in the sense of Norenzayan and Heine (2005). But spacing also differs, and participants from Greenland, Finland, and Denmark systematically keep a larger interpersonal distance than subjects from Italy, India and Cameroon, which confirms the classic difference between southern 'contact-cultures' and northern 'low-contact cultures'. It is documented how personal space shrinks or expands depending on context and depending on whether a person occupies a territory or arrives at a territory occupied by somebody else. Personal space may even 'rub off ' on a person's belongings, and this opens up for a whole new area of spatial relations not studied before.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Høgh-Olesen, Henrik
spellingShingle Høgh-Olesen, Henrik
Human Spatial Behaviour: The Spacing of People, Objects and Animals in Six Cross-Cultural Samples
author_facet Høgh-Olesen, Henrik
author_sort Høgh-Olesen, Henrik
title Human Spatial Behaviour: The Spacing of People, Objects and Animals in Six Cross-Cultural Samples
title_short Human Spatial Behaviour: The Spacing of People, Objects and Animals in Six Cross-Cultural Samples
title_full Human Spatial Behaviour: The Spacing of People, Objects and Animals in Six Cross-Cultural Samples
title_fullStr Human Spatial Behaviour: The Spacing of People, Objects and Animals in Six Cross-Cultural Samples
title_full_unstemmed Human Spatial Behaviour: The Spacing of People, Objects and Animals in Six Cross-Cultural Samples
title_sort human spatial behaviour: the spacing of people, objects and animals in six cross-cultural samples
publisher Brill
publishDate 2008
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156853708x358173
https://brill.com/view/journals/jocc/8/3-4/article-p245_4.xml
https://data.brill.com/files/journals/15685373_008_03-04_s004_text.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(167.450,167.450,-78.083,-78.083)
geographic Greenland
Heine
geographic_facet Greenland
Heine
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
op_source Journal of Cognition and Culture
volume 8, issue 3-4, page 245-280
ISSN 1567-7095 1568-5373
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1163/156853708x358173
container_title Journal of Cognition and Culture
container_volume 8
container_issue 3-4
container_start_page 245
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