Comparison of Egyptian and Canadian children on a picture apperception test.
Author: Barbopoulos A, Fisharah F, Clark JM, el Khatib A.
Source:
Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology, 8(4), 395.
Individualism-collectivism theory predicted that Egyptian and Canadian children's
performance would differ on relevant scales of the Roberts Apperception Test for
Children (RATC). The RATC was administered to 34 Egyptian and 34 Canadian
children ages 6-13 years. Canadian children scored higher on autonomy and lower
on receiving support from others and parental limit setting. At older ages,
Egyptian children manifested less rejection, desire for help from others, and
aggression. There were no cultural differences in anxiety or depression and few
differences on indicator and resolution scales related to understanding the task
and resolving problems. The findings validated cross-cultural use of the RATC and
demonstrated that the increasingly general theory of collectivism allowed
meaningful predictions about personality and clinical traits.