Abstract
An innovative aspect of consensus analysis is that it provides quantitative and culturally “correct” models of semantic domains. These models can then be compared with behavioral data to examine the relationship between culture and behavior. In this article, the author compares a consensus model of participation in the festival (cargo) system in a small village in Tlaxcala, Mexico, with church records of actual participation. Informants strongly agreed on how the system is organized. Participants' actual behavior correlates moderately with the shared cultural model.
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