国际学生了解外国的喜好吗?语言、身份和同化的相互作用

IF 2.5 2区 经济学 Q2 ECONOMICS
Paul Clist , Ying-yi Hong
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引用次数: 0

摘要

每年都有数以百万计的学生在国外的大学学习,换一种文化环境。这可能会揭示衡量偏好是固定的还是灵活的,是否可以通过迁移国家或学习一门新语言在短期内改变。我们通过测量国际学生的偏好来理清这些影响。对于在英国的中国学生(他们来英国的时间不超过5年),我们随机选择一种调查语言。我们在每个国家增加参考小组,用相关语言进行调查。简单的比较提供了对语言影响的因果估计和对国家、地区和国籍差异的观察估计。我们发现语言对一系列调查结果有很大的因果影响。效应大小与不同国家或民族的差异相似(0.4个标准差),大于不同地区的差异(0.1个标准差)。同化理论预测,在英国的中国学生在测量偏好上的任何变化都将倾向于英国学生,即使这种变化可能很小。我们找不到这个。在普通话上,中国学生和北京学生几乎没有什么不同。但在英语中,他们与在北京的中国学生或在英国的英国学生都不亲近。这可以用单一文化主体的身份启动模型来解释。对于在英国的中国学生来说,说英语会减少对中国框架的吸引力,而不会增加对英国框架的吸引力。国际学生与其说是学会了外国的偏好,不如说是学会了忽略旧的偏好。我们对大多数陈述偏好的依赖使丰富的数据集涵盖许多领域;未来还需要进一步研究,以确定这种巨大的影响是否也适用于广泛的偏好。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Do international students learn foreign preferences? The interplay of language, identity and assimilation

Every year millions of students study at foreign universities, swapping one set of cultural surroundings for another. This may reveal whether measured preferences are fixed or flexible, whether they can be altered in the short run by moving country, or learning a new language. We disentangle these influences by measuring international students’ preferences. For Chinese students in the UK (who arrived up to five years previously) we randomise a survey’s language. We add reference groups in each country, doing the survey in the relevant language. Simple comparisons provide a causal estimate of language’s effect and observational estimates of differences by country, location and nationality. We find language has a large causal effect on a range of survey responses. The effect size is similar to differences by country or nationality (at 0.4 standard deviations), and larger than differences by location (at 0.1 standard deviations). Assimilation theories predict any movement in measured preferences for Chinese students in the UK would be towards those of UK students, even if they may be small. We do not find this. In Mandarin, Chinese students hardly differ from those in Beijing. Yet in English, they are not close to either Chinese students in Beijing or British students in the UK. This can be explained by a model of identity priming with monocultural subjects. For Chinese students in the UK, speaking English reduces the pull of a Chinese frame without increasing the pull of a British one. International students do not so much learn foreign preferences as learn to ignore old ones. Our reliance on mostly stated preferences enables a rich dataset covering many domains; future work is needed to see if such large effects are also found for a wide range of revealed preferences.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
31.40%
发文量
69
审稿时长
63 days
期刊介绍: The Journal aims to present research that will improve understanding of behavioral, in particular psychological, aspects of economic phenomena and processes. The Journal seeks to be a channel for the increased interest in using behavioral science methods for the study of economic behavior, and so to contribute to better solutions of societal problems, by stimulating new approaches and new theorizing about economic affairs. Economic psychology as a discipline studies the psychological mechanisms that underlie economic behavior. It deals with preferences, judgments, choices, economic interaction, and factors influencing these, as well as the consequences of judgements and decisions for economic processes and phenomena. This includes the impact of economic institutions upon human behavior and well-being. Studies in economic psychology may relate to different levels of aggregation, from the household and the individual consumer to the macro level of whole nations. Economic behavior in connection with inflation, unemployment, taxation, economic development, as well as consumer information and economic behavior in the market place are thus among the fields of interest. The journal also encourages submissions dealing with social interaction in economic contexts, like bargaining, negotiation, or group decision-making. The Journal of Economic Psychology contains: (a) novel reports of empirical (including: experimental) research on economic behavior; (b) replications studies; (c) assessments of the state of the art in economic psychology; (d) articles providing a theoretical perspective or a frame of reference for the study of economic behavior; (e) articles explaining the implications of theoretical developments for practical applications; (f) book reviews; (g) announcements of meetings, conferences and seminars.
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