Comparison of influence of Thai and Japanese cultures on reasoning in social communication using simulated crowds

Difficulties living in unfamiliar cultures are caused by differences in patterns of thinking, points of view, and physical action styles. Learning to understand these different styles is one solution that may help people to live together with their differences. This paper presents our findings on le...

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Main Authors: Sutasinee Thovuttikul, Yoshimasa Ohmoto, Toyoaki Nishida
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of Information and Telecommunication
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/24751839.2018.1537557
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spelling doaj-b395f669e95448da8c47bce0c53934712020-11-25T00:10:21ZengTaylor & Francis GroupJournal of Information and Telecommunication2475-18392475-18472019-01-013111513410.1080/24751839.2018.15375571537557Comparison of influence of Thai and Japanese cultures on reasoning in social communication using simulated crowdsSutasinee Thovuttikul0Yoshimasa Ohmoto1Toyoaki Nishida2Kyoto UniversityKyoto UniversityKyoto UniversityDifficulties living in unfamiliar cultures are caused by differences in patterns of thinking, points of view, and physical action styles. Learning to understand these different styles is one solution that may help people to live together with their differences. This paper presents our findings on learners’ cultural understanding during interaction based on culturally influenced communication in simulated crowds. Japanese and Thai participants were asked to obtain multiple tickets available at two service counters, A and B, in a shared virtual space, where a service person provided a ticket upon request. Virtual customers moved around in the system to acquire tickets and, if a counter was occupied by a customer, other customers had to wait. Two types of waiting styles (line and group) and two service person fairness levels (fair and unfair) were configured and the reactions of participants evaluated. Furthermore, the counter selection results and selection reasoning results were analysed using the ANOVA process. The results showed that culture influences ideas of waiting differently between Japanese and Thai participants: Japanese participants focused on the benefits of waiting, such as waiting speed, whereas Thai participants focused on the reaction or response of the service person to customers.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/24751839.2018.1537557Cultural learning systemperception on different culturefairnesswaiting behavioursimulated crowd
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sutasinee Thovuttikul
Yoshimasa Ohmoto
Toyoaki Nishida
spellingShingle Sutasinee Thovuttikul
Yoshimasa Ohmoto
Toyoaki Nishida
Comparison of influence of Thai and Japanese cultures on reasoning in social communication using simulated crowds
Journal of Information and Telecommunication
Cultural learning system
perception on different culture
fairness
waiting behaviour
simulated crowd
author_facet Sutasinee Thovuttikul
Yoshimasa Ohmoto
Toyoaki Nishida
author_sort Sutasinee Thovuttikul
title Comparison of influence of Thai and Japanese cultures on reasoning in social communication using simulated crowds
title_short Comparison of influence of Thai and Japanese cultures on reasoning in social communication using simulated crowds
title_full Comparison of influence of Thai and Japanese cultures on reasoning in social communication using simulated crowds
title_fullStr Comparison of influence of Thai and Japanese cultures on reasoning in social communication using simulated crowds
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of influence of Thai and Japanese cultures on reasoning in social communication using simulated crowds
title_sort comparison of influence of thai and japanese cultures on reasoning in social communication using simulated crowds
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Journal of Information and Telecommunication
issn 2475-1839
2475-1847
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Difficulties living in unfamiliar cultures are caused by differences in patterns of thinking, points of view, and physical action styles. Learning to understand these different styles is one solution that may help people to live together with their differences. This paper presents our findings on learners’ cultural understanding during interaction based on culturally influenced communication in simulated crowds. Japanese and Thai participants were asked to obtain multiple tickets available at two service counters, A and B, in a shared virtual space, where a service person provided a ticket upon request. Virtual customers moved around in the system to acquire tickets and, if a counter was occupied by a customer, other customers had to wait. Two types of waiting styles (line and group) and two service person fairness levels (fair and unfair) were configured and the reactions of participants evaluated. Furthermore, the counter selection results and selection reasoning results were analysed using the ANOVA process. The results showed that culture influences ideas of waiting differently between Japanese and Thai participants: Japanese participants focused on the benefits of waiting, such as waiting speed, whereas Thai participants focused on the reaction or response of the service person to customers.
topic Cultural learning system
perception on different culture
fairness
waiting behaviour
simulated crowd
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/24751839.2018.1537557
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