@article{oai:meilib.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000123, author = {Sud, Prerna}, journal = {比較文化, Comparative culture,the journal of Miyazaki International College}, month = {}, note = {The study examined how, and to what extent, gender and cultural differences affect subjects’ interpersonal, nonverbal sensitivity. The researcher assessed male and female subjects, from Japan, India and the United States, on measured (The Interpersonal Perception Task-15; IPT-15) interpersonal sensitivity. Factorial analyses of the IPT-15 displayed a highly significant main effect of gender with women outscoring men across cultures. Overall, while American participants on average, scored highest on the IPT-15 followed by Indian participants, with the Japanese participants scoring lowest; the factorial analysis did not yield significant effect of culture on the IPT-15 scores. Implications of these findings are discussed.}, pages = {34--51}, title = {Gender Differences in Nonverbal, Interpersonal Sensitivity Across Three Cultures: Japan, India, and the United States}, volume = {16}, year = {2011} }