Found 4642 Hypotheses across 465 Pages (0.005 seconds)
  1. Cultures who do not engage in menopause rituals will indicate acceptable and unacceptable behavior during and after menopause (49)Griffen, Joyce - A cross-cultural investigation of behavioral changes at menopause, 1977 - 2 Variables

    This article presents an attempt to cross-culturally test of the hypothesis that rituals and/or behavioral changes will be associated with menopause. Due to a lack of sufficient data, statistical analyses were not performed but an examination of the ethnographic literature on the topic is presented.

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  2. The presence of a word for middle age (as distinguished from old age) will be positively associated with a higher status for women after menopause (6)Bart, Pauline B. - Why women's status changes in the middle ages: the turns of the social ferri..., 1969 - 2 Variables

    This article focuses on the cross-cultural data comparing the relationship between changes in status and availability of important roles, with an emphasis on women. Cultural and structural aspects of society are examined to discover their relationship to the position of women after their child-bearing years.

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  3. The more restrictive the cultural sphere regarding the body, the less humor about body parts (162).Alford, Finnegan - A holo-cultural study of humor, 1981 - 5 Variables

    This article presents a variety of findings regarding the nature and characteristics of humor and humorists, cross-culturally. It is a thorough preliminary study on the topic with a review of other work on humor and and outline of areas to be addressed by future research.

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  4. "If explicit definitions of old age can be determined…these definitions should cluster into a limited number of definitional categories" (19).Glascock, Anthony P. - Social asset or social burden: treatment of the aged in non-industrial societies, 1981 - 1 Variables

    This article uses cross-cultural methodology to examine the classification and treatment of the aged. Results suggest that the combination of supportive/unsupportive treatment is associated with the intact/decrepit age grouping.

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  5. Definitions of old age will cluster into a limited number of definitional categories (315).Glascock, Anthony P. - A holocultural analysis of old age, 1980 - 1 Variables

    This study provides a cross-cultural examination of the definitions of old age. Further research on these definitions and their implications is suggested.

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  6. Male sexual jealousy is a cross-cultural universalDaly, Martin - Male Sexual Jealousy, 1982 - 1 Variables

    The implications of male sexual jealousy, a postulated universal, are explored. A cross-cultural review of homicides and adultery law is used to indicate male sexual jealousy as a leading cause. Statistical models are not presented; conclusions are deduced from a literature review.

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  7. The scale of human groups (particularly community size) is associated with hierarchical complexity (49)Feinman, Gary M. - Size, complexity, and organizational variation: a comparative approach, 2010 - 2 Variables

    This article proposes that integrative differences mediate the relationship between demographic size and political complexity. Hypotheses are supported by a review of previous literature.

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  8. Femme fatales will be more prevalent in folktales in egalitarian societies than in stratified societies (62)Jankowiak, William - Femme fatale and status fatale: a cross-cultural perspective, 2000 - 2 Variables

    This study documents the phenomenon of the 'femme fatale' (a dangerous woman) and 'status fatale' (a dangerous man) cross-culturally. The 'femme fatale' motif is practically universal. Data supports the idea that emotional involvement, rather than sexual gratification, was the primary motivation for seeking out a stranger of the opposite sex. A literature review is provided.

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  9. Status fatales will be more prevalent in folktales in stratified societies than in egalitarian societies (62)Jankowiak, William - Femme fatale and status fatale: a cross-cultural perspective, 2000 - 2 Variables

    This study documents the phenomenon of the 'femme fatale' (a dangerous woman) and 'status fatale' (a dangerous man) cross-culturally. The 'femme fatale' motif is practically universal. Data supports the idea that emotional involvement, rather than sexual gratification, was the primary motivation for seeking out a stranger of the opposite sex. A literature review is provided.

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  10. The simpler the society, the wider the range of humor targets (156).Alford, Finnegan - A holo-cultural study of humor, 1981 - 0 Variables

    This article presents a variety of findings regarding the nature and characteristics of humor and humorists, cross-culturally. It is a thorough preliminary study on the topic with a review of other work on humor and and outline of areas to be addressed by future research.

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