Cross-cultural studies
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- | {{Template}} | + | {{Template}}Cross-cultural comparisons take several forms. One is comparison of case studies, another is controlled comparison among variants of a common derivation, and a third is comparison within a sample of cases. '''Cross-cultural studies''', the third of these forms, is a specialization in [[anthropology]] and sister sciences ([[sociology]], [[economics]], [[political science]]) that uses field data from many [[society|societies]] to examine the scope of [[human behavior]] and test hypotheses about human behavior and culture. Unlike [[comparative studies]], which examines similar characteristics of a few societies, cross-cultural studies uses a sufficiently large sample that statistical analysis can be made to show relationships or lack or relationships between the traits in question. These studies are surveys of [[ethnography|ethnographic]] data. |
+ | Cross-cultural studies, sometimes called ''Holocultural Studies'', has been used by [[social scientist]]s of many disciplines, particularly [[cultural anthropology]] and [[psychology]]. | ||
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Cross-cultural studies, sometimes called Holocultural Studies, has been used by social scientists of many disciplines, particularly cultural anthropology and psychology.
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