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Latent structureCultural domain analysis

Cultural Consensus Model

The cultural consensus model is a latent-structure measurement framework that estimates the culturally shared answers to a set of questions and, simultaneously, how much each informant knows, without the researcher knowing the correct answers in advance. Introduced by Romney, Weller and Batchelder in 1986, it treats agreement among informants as evidence of shared knowledge and uses a factor-analytic (or, in modern variants, Bayesian) decomposition to recover both a single 'answer key' and an informant-specific competence score.

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Sources

  1. Romney, A. K., Weller, S. C., & Batchelder, W. H. (1986). Culture as consensus: A theory of culture and informant accuracy. American Anthropologist, 88(2), 313–338. DOI: 10.1525/aa.1986.88.2.02a00020
  2. Weller, S. C., & Romney, A. K. (1988). Systematic Data Collection. Qualitative Research Methods Series 10. Newbury Park, CA: Sage. ISBN: 9780803930742

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Cultural Consensus Theory and the Consensus Model. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/anthropology/cultural-consensus-model

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ScholarGateCultural Consensus Model (Cultural Consensus Theory and the Consensus Model). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/anthropology/cultural-consensus-model · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026