Abstract
Theorists dealing with the relationship between communication and culture confront the dilemma of trying to describe communication as culture‐laden without making statements which are themselves not so culture‐laden as to be mere ethnocentric expressions. One way of coping with the dilemma is to use “transcultural concepts”; as defined by Kang and Pearce. “Logical force,”; a concept derived from the theory of “the coordinated management of meaning,”; is proposed as a useful transcultural concept and tested in a cross‐cultural comparison. High and low levels of self‐disclosure were manipulated in a simulated conversation in which North American and Chinese subjects were asked to role‐play and subsequently describe. Obtained differences between conditions and between cultures in the logical force described as impinging on their response to the self‐disclosing messages were understood as descriptions of the differences between the cultures. The configuration of linkages within the logical force measures are ...
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