Abstract

Abstract The authors hypothesized that self-monitoring rates would be higher among British respondents than among Singaporean-Chinese respondents, and that, whereas self-monitoring would predict relationship quality among British respondents, it would be unrelated to relationship quality among Chinese respondents. Fifty-two British university students and 36 Chinese university students completed Snyder's (1974) Self-Monitoring scale and the Abbreviated Dyadic Adjustment Scale (Sharpley & Cross, 1982). The resultant data supported both hypotheses.

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