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Culture & Process dimension – Final Graded Quiz :International and Cross-Cultural Negotiation (Negotiation, Mediation and Conflict Resolution Specialization) Answers 2026

Question 1

An international negotiator with a low-context culture:

  • ❌ Insists on addressing counterparts by their titles.

  • Avoids personal anecdotes and refrains from questions regarding private and family aspects.

  • ❌ Tries to start the discussion on a first-name basis.

Explanation

Low-context cultures focus on task, facts, and explicit communication, not personal or relational probing.


Question 2

When first meeting Italian counterparts, you should pay close attention to:

  • ❌ Using your Italian dictionary to greet them in their language.

  • ❌ Leaving aside enough time for greetings and small talk to gather information.

  • ❌ Not let them control the exchange; structure tightly because they talk a lot.

  • Let them speak, ask complementary questions, and rephrase to clarify understanding.

Explanation

Italy leans toward high-context communication—listening, clarifying, and relationship sensitivity matter.


Question 3

Expectations for a first client meeting in Houston, Texas (US):

  • ❌ Easy going, all cards on the table, quick overview only.

  • Friendly and direct at first, then detailed and possibly tough on financial aspects; what’s written matters.

  • ❌ Tough and secretive; keep aces hidden.

Explanation

US business culture is direct, explicit, and contract-driven; details and written terms are crucial.


Question 4

High-context vs low-context meeting: who faces more difficulty?

  • ❌ Low-context negotiator.

  • High-context negotiator.

  • ❌ Neither of them.

Explanation

High-context negotiators may struggle with pressure for explicitness, speed, and written commitments.


Question 5

Most accurate statement on non-verbal expressions:

  • In African cultures, a younger negotiator often shows respect by letting elders speak and avoiding intense eye contact.

  • ❌ In Western cultures, brief eye contact is enough.

  • ❌ In the US, direct gaze plus physical contact is best to show sincerity.

Explanation

Non-verbal norms vary widely; respectful avoidance of intense eye contact is common in many African contexts.


Question 6

Best description of a ‘monochronic’ culture (Edward T. Hall):

  • Time is linear and sequenced into separate phases, handled one after another.

  • ❌ People can only do one thing at a time.

  • ❌ One hour equals one task across the day.

Explanation

Monochronic cultures view time as linear, scheduled, and segmented.


Question 7

How a polychronic negotiator perceives a monochronic one:

  • ❌ “She likes her watch and wants me to notice it.”

  • “She keeps checking the time—maybe she has other pressing business; we can reconvene.”

  • ❌ “She’s in a rush—time to hurry and make concessions.”

Explanation

Polychronic cultures value flexibility and relationships; time-checking signals competing priorities, not urgency.


Question 8

What Ms. B (American business lawyer) is thinking:

  • ❌ Staring at the watch will surely send the message.

  • “It’s already 4pm and we’re still on item #1; we’re stuck and not progressing.”

  • ❌ “This is fine; I’ll deal with it later.”

Explanation

Monochronic, low-context negotiators equate time with progress and expect agenda movement.


Question 9

Best description of non-verbal communication:

  • Glances, looks, hand gestures, nods, facial expressions, and more.

  • ❌ Any word that is made up.

  • ❌ Songs, poetry, artistic expression.

Explanation

Non-verbal communication conveys meaning without words, through physical and visual cues.


🧾 Summary Table

Q.No ✅ Correct Answer Key Concept
1 2 Low-context behavior
2 4 Italian / high-context style
3 2 US negotiation culture
4 2 High vs low context risk
5 1 Cultural non-verbal norms
6 1 Monochronic time
7 2 Polychronic perception
8 2 Time & progress (US)
9 1 Non-verbal communication