
Sharon Shavitt
My research focuses on the cross-cultural factors affecting consumer persuasion, self-presentation, and survey responding. This work is at the intersection of consumer psychology and cross-cultural research.
Sample Cross-Cultural Research Projects:
Cultural Differences in Self-Presentation and Survey Responding
A variety of projects examine the role of cultural factors in prompting socially desirable responding (SDR; i.e., responding to questions in a manner designed to make the respondent look good) and other survey response styles. In one project, survey research conducted with different populations assessed how collectivist and individualist cultural orientations affect such responding. We proposed that people with both types of cultural orientations engage in desirable responding, albeit in distinct ways. Across several studies, people with an individualistic cultural orientation appear more likely to engage in self-deceptive enhancement, the tendency to see oneself in a positive light and to give inflated assessments of one’s skills and abilities. Collectivists are more likely to engage in impression management by misrepresenting their self-reported actions to appear more normatively appropriate. This program of research contributes to survey methodology by, 1) examining distinctions between types of SDR and, 2) demonstrating that respondents with different cultural orientations use distinct strategies for self-presentation. Results also have implications for improving the quality of data obtained from samples with different cultural orientations, especially when survey questions ask for sensitive information.
Cultural Differences in Advertising Effectiveness and Advertising Content
Examines the types of advertising messages that are persuasive and prevalent, as a function of local cultural values and ethnicity. Analyses focus on the role of vertical versus horizontal cultural orientations in the effectiveness of status-relevant appeals. Results have implications for understanding the way opinions and judgments are formed in different societies and cultural groups.
Primary Interests:
- Attitudes and Beliefs
- Culture and Ethnicity
- Persuasion, Social Influence
- Self and Identity
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Video Gallery
Opinions Across Cultures
Journal Articles:
- Holbrook, A., Anand, S., Johnson, T., Cho, Y., Shavitt, S., Chavez, N., & Weiner, S. (forthcoming). Response heaping in interviewer-administered surveys: A cognitive shortcut to satisfice? Public Opinion Quarterly.
- Johnson, T. J., Kulesa, P., Cho, Y. I., & Shavitt, S. (2005). The relation between culture and response styles: Evidence from 19 countries. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 36(2), 264-277.
- Jung, K., Shavitt, S., Viswanathan, M., Hilbe, J. (forthcoming). Female hurricanes are deadlier than male hurricanes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
- Lalwani, A., & Shavitt, S. (August, 2013). You get what you pay for? Self-construal influences price-quality judgments. Journal of Consumer Research, 40(2), 255-267.
- Lalwani, A., & Shavitt, S. (2009). The “me” I claim to be: Cultural self-construal elicits self-presentational goal pursuit. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 97(1), 88-102.
- Lalwani, A., Shavitt, S., & Johnson, T. P. (2006). What is the relation between cultural orientation and socially desirable responding? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 90(1), 165-178.
- Lee, K., & Shavitt, S. (2009). Can McDonald's food ever be seen as healthy? Metacognitive experiences affect the perceived understanding of a brand. Journal of Marketing Research, 46, 222-233.
- Lee, K., & Shavitt, S. (2006). The use of cues depends on goals: Store reputation affects product judgments when social identity goals are salient. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 16(3), 260-271.
- Nelson, M. R., & Shavitt, S. (2002). Horizontal and Vertical Individualism and Achievement Values: A Multi-Method of Examination of Denmark and the U.S. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 33(5), 439-458.
- Riemer, H., & Shavitt, S. (2011). Impression management in survey responding: Easier for collectivists or individualists? Journal of Consumer Psychology, 21(2), 157-168.
- Riemer, H., Shavitt, S., Koo, M., Markus, H. R. (forthcoming). Preferences don’t have to be personal: Expanding attitude theorizing with a cross-cultural perspective. Psychological Review.
- Shavitt, S., Lalwani, A., Zhang, J., & Torelli, C. (2006). The horizontal/vertical distinction in cross-cultural consumer research. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 16(4), 325-356.
- Shavitt, S., & Schlosser, A. (2002). Anticipating Discussion about a Product: Rehearsing What to Say Can Affect Your Judgments. Journal of Consumer Research, 29(1), 101-115.
- Torelli, C., & Shavitt, S. (October, 2010). Culture and concepts of power. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 99(4), 703-723.
- Torelli, C., & Shavitt, S. (2011). The impact of power on information processing depends on cultural orientation. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 47(5), 959-967.
- Torelli, C., & Wong, J (2009). Identity-based motivation: Constraints and opportunities in consumer research. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 19(3), 261-266
- White, T. B., Zahay, D., Thorbjornsen, H., & Shavitt, S. (2008). Getting too personal: Reactance to highly personalized email solicitations. Marketing Letters, 19, 39-50.
Other Publications:
- Johnson, T., Holbrook, A., & Shavitt, S. (2011). Cross-cultural research methods in psychology. In D. Matsumoto and F. van de Vijver (Eds.), Cross-Cultural search Methods in Psychology (pp. 130-175). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Lalwani, A., & Shavitt, S. (2012). The relation between gender and cultural orientation and its implications for advertising. In S. Okazaki (Ed.), Handbook of Research on International Advertising (pp. 455-470). Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishers.
- Shavitt, S., Torelli, C., & Riemer, H. (2011). Horizontal and vertical individualism and collectivism: Implications for understanding psychological processes. In M. Gelfand, C. Chiu, and Y. Hong (Eds.), Advances in Culture and Psychology (pp. 309-350). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Courses Taught:
Sharon Shavitt
Department of Business Administration
350 Wohlers Hall
1206 S. Sixth Street
Champaign, Illinois 61820
United States of America
- Phone: (217) 333-0784
- Fax: (217) 333-7410