Preferred Interpersonal Distances: A Global Comparison

Authors
  • A. Sorokowska
  • P. Sorokowski
  • P. Hilpert
  • K. Cantarero
  • T. Frackowiak
  • K. Ahmadi
  • A.M. Alghraibeh
  • R. Aryeetey
  • A. Bertoni
  • K. Bettache
  • S. Blumen
  • M. Błażejewska
  • T. Bortolini
  • M. Butovskaya
  • F.N. Castro
  • H. Cetinkaya
  • D. Cunha
  • D. David
  • O.A. David
  • F.A. Dileym
  • A.C. Domínguez Espinosa
  • S. Donato
  • D. Dronova
  • S. Dural
  • J. Fialová
  • M. Fisher
  • E. Gulbetekin
  • A. Hamamcıoğlu Akkaya
  • I. Hromatko
  • R. Iafrate
  • M. Iesyp
  • B. James
  • J. Jaranovic
  • F. Jiang
  • C.O. Kimamo
  • G. Kjelvik
  • F. Koç
  • A. Laar
  • F. de Araújo Lopes
  • G. Macbeth
  • N.M. Marcano
  • R. Martinez
  • N. Mesko
  • N. Molodovskaya
  • K. Moradi
  • Z. Motahari
  • A. Mühlhauser
  • J.C. Natividade
  • J. Ntayi
  • E. Stamkou ORCID logo
Publication date 2017
Journal Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Volume | Issue number 48 | 4
Pages (from-to) 577-592
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
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.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary file
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1177/0022022117698039
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85018758377
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