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1 f Child Health Assessment Questionnaire, the cross-cultural adaptation of the Child Health Assessment
2                    This study focuses on the cross-cultural adaptation of the Emotional Outburst Ques
3                                              Cross-cultural analyses of early statecraft suggest that
4                                              Cross-cultural analysis further revealed similarities an
5                              This revealed a cross-cultural and developmental continuity: in all site
6 in a big-data approach to report on a unique cross-cultural and diverse data set: >2,500 d-long, chil
7 ings shed light on the necessity for further cross-cultural and longitudinal research into the relati
8                                       Recent cross-cultural and neuro-hormonal investigations have su
9          These results shed new light on the cross-cultural and potential causal dynamics of this ove
10 y to be a culturally specific construct or a cross-cultural and potentially universal phenomenon.
11 ovide mechanistic support for secular-trend, cross-cultural, and cross-sectional epidemiologic studie
12 otomies and toward testing of cross-species, cross-cultural, and other empirical predictions.
13 rocesses while simultaneously evaluating the cross-cultural applicability of a survey instrument in t
14 ns after major disasters and demonstrate the cross-cultural applicability of Western psychotherapeuti
15 more diverse samples can further enhance its cross-cultural applicability.The stage 1 protocol for th
16  to the mental health field to develop truly cross-cultural approaches to mental health research and
17  they provide care at a distance, navigating cross-cultural attitudes and social norms around long-te
18 outline some of the major issues involved in cross-cultural care and indicate how the patient, family
19 rgeons identified the need to provide better cross-cultural care and proposed tenets for training.
20  and faculty on the skills needed to provide cross-cultural care.
21 aluation, perceived inadequacy of questions, cross-cultural classroom norms, and the legacy of prior
22 eviously unstudied and highly differentiated cross-cultural clusters emerged from the data and are pr
23                                A new wave of cross-cultural cognitive science has sought to remedy th
24                               The promise of cross-cultural cognitive science will not be fully reali
25                                              Cross-cultural collaboration, when it works, is synergis
26 e complexity, with critical consequences for cross-cultural communication and globalization.
27                                    Improving cross-cultural communication between primary care physic
28 ng 5 domains: (1) knowledge of dementia, (2) cross-cultural communication, (3) briefings and debriefi
29 principles inform training on implicit bias, cross-cultural communication, and intersectional mentori
30 ramatic implications for language education, cross-cultural communication, and literal translations,
31 ifferences in expectations that could impact cross-cultural communication.
32  (text analysis of congressional speeches, a cross-cultural comparison, surveys, and experiments), pe
33 r, we show that, once potential confounds in cross-cultural comparisons are controlled for by present
34 s the well-being of adopted adolescents, and cross-cultural comparisons are rarely reported.
35          Here, we analyze dream content with cross-cultural comparisons between the BaYaka (Rep.
36                We conclude that phylogenetic cross-cultural comparisons can focus screening efforts o
37 een of interest to social scientists and how cross-cultural comparisons have been used to test psycho
38                                              Cross-cultural comparisons of the mental representations
39 ected tradition of research on concepts uses cross-cultural comparisons to explore which aspects of c
40 e these differences into account when making cross-cultural comparisons.
41 s need to be identified and accounted for in cross-cultural comparisons.
42 , and evaluation to demonstrate and maintain cross-cultural competencies, mitigation of bias, effecti
43 kers were weakly correlated, indicating some cross-cultural concordance in phonesthetic judgments, bu
44 infection status, adding to our knowledge of cross-cultural connectivity in the region nearly three m
45 -stroke depression and social impairment are cross-cultural consequences that affect between one-thir
46              Our data underscore the role of cross-cultural contacts in the dissemination of malaria,
47 rly-life determinants of RR/L, especially in cross-cultural contexts, this study provides valuable in
48                                              Cross-cultural curricula have been developed to address
49         This paper discusses a patient-based cross-cultural curriculum for residents and medical stud
50 ration, our results make clear that existing cross-cultural data cannot be taken as empirical support
51 e, our findings call for reinterpretation of cross-cultural data on cooperation.
52 wing to the small sample size of some of the cross-cultural data we use.
53 ons where social touch is allowed in a large cross-cultural dataset (N = 1,368 from Finland, France,
54 argue that the growing availability of large cross-cultural datasets facilitates the use of computati
55              We tested three hypotheses in a cross-cultural design (20,802 individuals in 23 countrie
56          To address this issue, we adopted a cross-cultural design where Malaysian Chinese, African,
57   Hofstede's dimensions provide a measure of cross-cultural difference; high or low scores are not in
58                                              Cross-cultural differences have also been documented, wi
59 e wrongness judgments might be influenced by cross-cultural differences in causal appraisals.
60 ities, intergroup polarization and conflict, cross-cultural differences in cooperation and norm enfor
61                                      Neither cross-cultural differences in facial shape variation, se
62 e world's first large-scale investigation of cross-cultural differences in mobile gaming via telemetr
63 elevance of twin studies, and the meaning of cross-cultural differences in theory of mind development
64 ferences, development, computer science, and cross-cultural differences is described that relates to
65         The aim of this study was to examine cross-cultural differences, as operationalized by Schwar
66 omplication of childbearing, is a prevalent, cross-cultural disorder with significant morbidity.
67 ing costly forms of cooperation and creating cross-cultural diversity.
68                               Each time, six cross-cultural emotions were tested.
69 look the importance of social factors on the cross-cultural encounter.
70  describes two cases that raise issues about cross-cultural end-of-life practice and suggests strateg
71                                          The cross-cultural evaluation process produced CVI scores fo
72                             First, I discuss cross-cultural evidence showing that a good deal of encu
73                                         Some cross-cultural evidence suggests lethal coalitionary agg
74                                   In humans, cross-cultural evidence suggests women's preferences for
75                               Despite strong cross-cultural evidence, these relationships were not co
76 erience (i.e., multicultural individuals and cross-cultural experiences) offers the intriguing possib
77 on of anchoring vignettes to investigate the cross-cultural functioning of the Edinburgh Postnatal De
78 llowing us to address limitations related to cross-cultural generalizability and measurement validity
79 ical basis for these claims is mixed and the cross-cultural generalizability of these claims has yet
80 an, thereby providing evidence for the ATI's cross-cultural generalizability.
81 er analysis establishes a data-driven set of cross-cultural groupings that describe differences in ho
82                                Religion is a cross-cultural human universal, yet explicit markers of
83 al comparisons to understand the dynamics of cross-cultural interfaces.
84 ation of mixed-breed, emphasise the value of cross-cultural investigations in order to develop a full
85 ly recognized that an understanding of these cross cultural issues is essential in order to be able t
86  impacts the way the game is played; (d) how cross-cultural issues in perception and behavior affect
87 tions; emerging topics on team selection and cross-cultural issues; and finally professional, legal,
88 mental health services; training of staff on cross-cultural issues; integration of mental healthcare
89 ant leadership, spirituality and leadership, cross-cultural leadership, and e-leadership.
90 facial changes with dominance as a result of cross-cultural learning, the present results suggest tha
91 pproach will be especially useful to improve cross-cultural life history datasets for small-scale soc
92                      This paper explores the cross-cultural methodological challenges involved in tra
93                            Thus the risk for cross-cultural misunderstandings surrounding care at the
94 plicit learning of structural relationships, cross-cultural musical similarities, or universal cognit
95       After a brief review of the history of cross-cultural OB, we review research on work motivation
96 is question cannot be answered by relying on cross-cultural or developmental studies alone, as these
97             This article reviews research on cross-cultural organizational behavior (OB).
98                                              Cross-cultural personality research suggests that indivi
99 lated, rural settings through an ecological, cross-cultural perspective represents one way to inform
100 ng with body parts is a handy and persistent cross-cultural phenomenon.
101 s of consciousness, have yet to be tested in cross-cultural populations that include small-scale fora
102                      The results suggest the cross-cultural presence of logarithmic scales for pitch,
103  myths, but also important patterns in their cross-cultural prevalence, interindividual distribution,
104 ugh telemedicine and community partnerships, cross-cultural provider training to reduce implicit bias
105 rvey experiments should be incorporated into cross-cultural psychiatric surveys when possible.
106 in time and space, we can better account for cross-cultural psychological diversity, historical chang
107                                              Cross-cultural psychologists have mostly contrasted East
108 istic paradigm is a basis of current work on cross-cultural psychology.
109                                              Cross-cultural regularities and diversities in human son
110  study provides strong empirical evidence of cross-cultural regularities in music and speech.
111 erceptual mechanisms that could help explain cross-cultural regularities in musical systems, but indi
112 s to quantitatively test for the presence of cross-cultural regularities using a sample of 10,062 mel
113 , as well as regarding the interpretation of cross-cultural regularities, that must be expected, but
114 an Chinese population, underscoring also the cross-cultural relevance of our findings.
115 motivate new developmental, comparative, and cross-cultural research about human cooperation.
116 sal influence of these interactions, whereas cross-cultural research demonstrates culturally determin
117                                     However, cross-cultural research examining media influence on bod
118 te that the use of latent variable models in cross-cultural research has resulted in a futile search
119       The review shows that developmentally, cross-cultural research in OB is coming of age.
120 ed for rigorous, prospective, mixed-methods, cross-cultural research on this topic.
121                        In line with previous cross-cultural research, characteristics indicating pass
122 cial and organizational context factors into cross-cultural research, taking indigenous perspectives
123 view that has been supported by considerable cross-cultural research.(1)(,)(2) The conclusion that hu
124                       In a large and diverse cross-cultural sample (N = 10,195 from 24 countries), we
125                        We combine this large cross-cultural sample with agent-based models to compare
126 s warrant replication in more representative cross-cultural samples.
127                                              Cross-cultural sentiment analysis in restaurant reviews
128 ults affirm XLM-RSA's capacity for effective cross-cultural sentiment analysis, paving the way for mo
129              There was a remarkable level of cross-cultural similarity in terms of the top predictors
130 ocieties have broadened our understanding of cross-cultural sleep patterns, revealing the flexibility
131 ich reproduces empirical results from recent cross-cultural studies and also yields an additional pre
132                                     Based on cross-cultural studies and my own fieldwork in Polynesia
133                                              Cross-cultural studies have challenged this view, findin
134                                              Cross-cultural studies indicate that women's sexual attr
135                                Evidence from cross-cultural studies may point to several distinct att
136 mary evidence for this hypothesis comes from cross-cultural studies of perceived attractiveness.
137 xical association across many of the largest cross-cultural studies on gender differences, including
138                                              Cross-cultural studies suggest that access to a conventi
139                                              Cross-cultural studies suggested a complex pattern of un
140 ociated with higher rates of hip fracture in cross-cultural studies.
141                                         This cross-cultural study examines the mediating effect of pr
142                                  The present cross-cultural study investigated gaze behaviour in the
143                We report the first extensive cross-cultural study investigating whether people from d
144                                         In a cross-cultural study of eight diverse societies, we prov
145                               In the largest cross-cultural study to date (total n = 1,091) on the to
146 s correspond well with empirical data from a cross-cultural survey and with numerical calculations fr
147                In the first study, we used a cross-cultural survey conducted in 37 countries to test
148                                            A cross-cultural survey experiment revealed a dominant ten
149 tic approach to translating and validating a cross-cultural survey instrument, including back-to-back
150 dge of the biogeosphere and the existence of cross-cultural traditions.
151                               Skilled use of cross-cultural understanding and communication technique
152  research advances knowledge that can foster cross-cultural understanding in a world of increasing gl
153 harmacogenomics, biopsychosocial, gender and cross cultural understandings of FGIDs, 3) reduces the u
154  been proposed that intense romantic love, a cross-cultural universal, is a developed form of this at
155 concerns: (1) There is limited discussion of cross-cultural universality and variation; (2) overgener
156                        Internal consistency, cross-cultural validity / measurement invariance and mea
157 , structural validity, internal consistency, cross-cultural validity and measurement invariance, reli
158 ffected by adversity, is needed to determine cross-cultural validity and the impact of trauma in adol
159 estionnaire (TSQ) is widely adopted, but its cross-cultural validity requires evaluation.
160  GSS having sufficient internal consistency, cross-cultural validity, and reliability, with reports s
161 uture studies should focus on evaluating the cross-cultural validity, reliability, and measurement er
162  (structural validity, internal consistency, cross-cultural validity, reliability, measurement error,
163  (structural validity, internal consistency, cross-cultural validity, reliability, measurement error,
164  societies, the measures have some degree of cross-cultural validity.
165                            At the same time, cross-cultural variability in effects is far below the l
166  group selection approaches and glosses over cross-cultural variability.
167            We show that there is substantial cross-cultural variation among eight traditional small-s
168 sals (simple-integer ratios 1:1 and 2:1) and cross-cultural variation for specific rhythmic categorie
169 energetic contributions were associated with cross-cultural variation in child and adolescent time al
170 ower of social-historical factors to explain cross-cultural variation in emotional expression and smi
171 gest that any approach seeking to understand cross-cultural variation in human behavior via an ecolog
172                    Recent studies argue that cross-cultural variation in human cooperation supports c
173                                        Given cross-cultural variation in the amount and structure of
174  provide empirical evidence of a systematic, cross-cultural variation in the importance of passion in
175 or naming, while opening directions to study cross-cultural variation in the need to communicate diff
176                         There is significant cross-cultural variation in the sex of individuals most
177                         We propose that this cross-cultural variation is a result of a contingent psy
178              Here we argue that the roots of cross-cultural variation often lie in the past.
179   Moving away from the evolutionary focus on cross-cultural variation, this article uses the market-i
180 only recently begun seriously grappling with cross-cultural variation.
181 g shared structural biases that may underpin cross-cultural variation.
182 e present evidence for this possibility from cross-cultural work examining children's imitation and i
183 alized/arbitrary processing which decades of cross-cultural work indicate develop primarily in "schoo
184 igns depicting a serial killer used in prior cross-cultural work.

 
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