Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repository.iimb.ac.in/handle/2074/10845
Title: Preferred interpersonal distances: a global comparison
Authors: Sorokowska, Agnieszka 
Sorokowski, Piotr 
Hilpert, Peter 
Cantarero, Katarzyna 
Frackowiak, Tomasz 
Ahmadi, Khodabakhsh 
Alghraibeh, Ahmad M 
Aryeetey, Richmond 
Bertoni, Anna 
Bettache, Karim 
Blumen, Sheyla 
Blazejewska, Marta 
Bortolini, Tiago 
Butovskaya, Marina 
Castro, Felipe Nalon 
Cetinkaya, Hakan 
Cunha, Diana 
David, Daniel 
David, Oana A 
Dileym, Fahd A 
Dominguez Espinosa, Alejandra del Carmen 
Donato, Silvia 
Dronova, Daria 
Dural, Seda 
Fialova, Jitka 
Fisher, Maryanne 
Gulbetekin, Evrim 
Hamamcioglu Akkaya, Aslihan 
Hromatko, Ivana 
Iafrate, Raffaella 
Iesyp, Mariana 
James, Bawo 
Jaranovic, Jelena 
Jiang, Feng 
Kimamo, Charles Obadiah 
Kjelvik, Grete 
Koc, Firat 
Laar, Amos 
de Araujo Lopes, Fivia 
Macbeth, Guillermo 
Marcano, Nicole M 
Martinez, Rocio 
Mesko, Norbert 
Molodovskaya, Natalya 
Moradi, Khadijeh 
Motahari, Zahrasadat 
Muhlhauser, Alexandra 
Natividade, Jean Carlos 
Ntayi, Joseph 
Oberzaucher, Elisabeth 
Ojedokun, Oluyinka 
Omar-Fauzee, Mohd Sofian Bin 
Onyishi, Ike E 
Paluszak, Anna 
Portugal, Alda 
Razumiejczyk, Eugenia 
Realo, Anu 
Relvas, Ana Paula 
Rivas, Maria 
Rizwan, Muhammad 
Salkicevic, Svjetlana 
Sarmany-Schuller, Ivan 
Schmehl, Susanne 
Senyk, Oksana 
Sinding, Charlotte 
Stamkou, Eftychia 
Stoyanova, Stanislava 
Sukolova, Denisa 
Sutresna, Nina 
Tadinac, Meri 
Teras, Andero 
Tinoco Ponciano, Edna Lucia 
Tripathi, Ritu 
Tripathi, Nachiketa 
Tripathi, Mamta 
Uhryn, Olja 
Yamamoto, Maria Emilia 
Yoo, Gyesook 
Pierce, John D 
Keywords: Interpersonal distance;Spatial behavior;Culture;Cultural psychology
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: Sage Publications
Abstract: Human spatial behavior has been the focus of hundreds of previous research studies. However, the conclusions and generalizability of previous studies on interpersonal distance preferences were limited by some important methodological and sampling issues. The objective of the present study was to compare preferred interpersonal distances across the world and to overcome the problems observed in previous studies. We present an extensive analysis of interpersonal distances over a large data set (N = 8,943 participants from 42 countries). We attempted to relate the preferred social, personal, and intimate distances observed in each country to a set of individual characteristics of the participants, and some attributes of their cultures. Our study indicates that individual characteristics (age and gender) influence interpersonal space preferences and that some variation in results can be explained by temperature in a given region. We also present objective values of preferred interpersonal distances in different regions, which might be used as a reference data point in future studies.
URI: https://repository.iimb.ac.in/handle/2074/10845
ISSN: 0022-0221
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0022022117698039
Appears in Collections:2010-2019

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