Title: Welcome to PSY 381 Psychology of Culture
1Welcome to PSY 381 Psychology of Culture
2Volunteer Service Learning
- Journeys End Refugee Services
- Financial literacy
- 6 sessions with newly arrived families
- About 20 hours
- Teams of three students
- Orientation next week
3Are the following universal?
- Smiling to express happiness
- Kissing
- Temperament
- Anorexia nervosa
- Depression
4Goals of Psychology
- 1) Build a body of knowledge about people
- 2) Apply this knowledge to intervene in peoples
lives -
- How do we get this knowledge?
- Not from a single study
- Most research has been done with American college
students
5Cross-Cultural Psychology
- Does our knowledge about people hold up in
another culture? - Cultures is the independent variable
- Look for universals and culture-specific
information.
6Brief History of the Field
- Diverse influences
- Interests in human diversity began to emerge in
the 15th century - Philosophers of the 17th and 18th century began
to debate the nature of human beings - By end of 19th, early 20th centanthropologists,
psychologists, and other social scientists began
to speculate on cc human behavior - Slowly things began to get empirical
- Galtoncc work on intelligence
- William RiversNew Guinea
- Richard ThurnwaldMelanesiacognitive functions
- C-c psych really came into its own in 1960s
- Until recently, though, people viewed CC Psych as
something only a few esoteric psychologists did
7C-C Psych Today
- APA Division Memberships
- 2. Experimental 925
- 6. Behavioral Neuroscience 538
- 7. Developmental 1,142
- 20. Adult Dev. and Aging 1,132
- 50. Addictions 993
- 53. International 714
- PsycInfo hits for "cross-cultural"
- 1980 289/28,737.0097
- 1990 839/58,451.014
- 2000 1545/70,567.021
- 2010 2931/161,743.018
- Added as major subject heading in PsycInfo in
1997
8What is cross-cultural psychology?
- Critical and comparative study of cultural
effects on human psychology - At least two cultural groups
- Not the same as cultural psychologyseeks to
discover links between a culture and the
psychology of individuals living in that culture
9Small groups Define culture
10What culture is not
- Racea group of people distinguished by certain
similar and genetically transmitted physical
characteristics - Ethnicitya group of people with a shared
cultural heritage - Nation a group of people who have a common
geographical origin, history, and language and
are defined as a unified political entity
11Definitions of Culture
- Kroeber Kluckholn (1952)6 categories in which
culture is discussed - Descriptive
- Historical
- Normative
- Psychological
- Structural
- Genetic
- Different aspects of these will be emphasized by
people in different cultures
12Aspects of Life Touched by Culture
- General characteristics
- Food and clothing
- Housing and technology
- Economy and transportation
- Individual and family activities
- Community and government
- Welfare, religion, and science
- Sex and the life cycle
13Definitions of Culture
- Tylor (1865) cultureall capabilities and habits
learned as members of a society - Linton (1936)social heredity
- A set of attitudes, behaviors, and symbols shared
by a large group of people and usually
communicated from one generation to another
14Types of Knowledge
- Scientific
- Popular or folk
- Ideological
- Legal
15Factors that Affect Culture
- The environmentavailable natural resources
- If few, must work together and with others
- If many, less need for teamwork
- Population densityhigher may require greater
social order - Affluencerelated to individualism and
emotionality - Technology
- Climatefood, clothes, health, housing
16Cultural Syndromes
- Dimensions along which cultures vary
- Typologies
- Hsu, 1972dominant family role
- Hallhigh vs. low context communication
- Triandissocial distance
17Cultural Complexity
- Murdock and Provost
- Writing and records
- Fixity of residence
- Agriculture
- Urbanization
- Technological specialization
- Land transport
- Money
- Density of population
- Level of political integration
- Social stratification
18Modernity
- Traditional
- Rooted in traditions, rules, symbols, and
principles established predominantly in the past.
- Tends to be more conservative and intolerant of
innovations. - Nontraditional
- New principles, ideas, and practices often
science and technology based. - Individuals choices are not strongly restricted
to the social prescriptions. - Embrace individualism. Good and evil is
relative. - Often associated with economic and social change.
19Tight/Loose
- Factors leading to tightness
- Cultural homogeneity
- Isolation from other cultural influences
- Population density
- Where there is need for coordinated action
- Factors leading to looseness
- Heterogeneity
- Much space between people
- Strong influences from other cultures
- Many solitary occupations
- Warmer climates favor looseness
20Geert Hofstede
- Began in 1960s
- Cultures Consequences
- Cultures and Organizations
- Cultural atlashelps person from X position
self around Y - Over 50 countries
- 4 dimensions emerged, then 5th
21Power Distance
- Power distancehow we deal with the inequality
between people that is inevitableare we highly
stratified or not? - Lower PDpreference for consultation/interdependen
ce - High PDpreference for dependence or
counterdependence - Scores are largely for middle class
- High PD at workwide salary range between top and
bottom at work, subordinates expect to be told
what to do - Low PD at workideal boss is a resourceful
democrat, privileges and status are frowned upon
22Individualism/Collectivism
- Power of the group vs. the power of the
individual relatively independent form PD - Collectivistpeople are born into extended
families or other ingroups which continue to
protect them in exchange for loyalty - Individualisteveryone grows up to look after
him/herself and his/her immediate family only - We vs. I
- Collectivistrelationships over task
- Individualisttask prevails over relationship
- Collectivistharmony and consensus
- Individualistself-actualization is the goal
23Masculinity/Femininity
- Degree to which culture holds to traditional
gender roles - Differences by gender in scores on this dimension
- Feminine cultures
- More leveling
- More likely in colder climates
- Dominant valuescaring for each other and
preservation people and warm relationships - Masculine cultures
- Dominant valuesmaterial success and progress
money and things are important men should be
tough and assertive, women should be tender and
take care of relationships
24Uncertainty Avoidance
- Degree to which members of a society feel
uncomfortable with uncertainty and ambiguity - Importance of punctualityclocks
- Weak UALow stress, uncertainty is a normal
feature of life and each day is accepted as it
comes no more rules than necessary - Strong UAUncertainty inherent in life is felt as
a continuous threat which must be fought high
stress lots of rules
25Confucian Dynamism
- Bond designed questionnaire with non-Western bias
and 10 basic Chinese valuesdid no locate
uncertainty avoidance, but did id this. - Long term vs short term orientation
26More on Individualism/Collectivism
- Basic question of how do we get social order
- Perceived potential to explain economic
development - Allocentrism
- Idiocentrism
- Emotions and IC
- Fundamental Attribution Error
- Self-Serving Bias/False Uniqueness Effect
- Social loafing vs. social striving
27Evaluating Cross-Cultural Research
- Considerations in hypothesis testing
- 1) Choice of theory and hypothesisbegin with a
question - 2) Design the methodology
- Pick a research paradigm
- Participants
- Selection of variables
- Environment, setting, and procedures
- 3) Decisions about analyzing data and reporting
findings - Choice of statistics
- Interpretation of results
- 4) Ethics
28Preparing for a Cross-Cultural Study
- Equivalence
- Hypothesis generation
- Design issues
- Comparativist
- Application-oriented
- Explanatory
- Ecological or cultural-level
- Sampling adequacy
- SES
- Literacy
29Definitions of Variables
- Equivalence of language
- Test translation
- Words that seem straightforward may not be.
- Need to avoid words like it and former or
latter - Some phrases have no equivalent in some languages
- Avoid metaphors like foot in mouth and vague
words like frequently - Even when words are the same, strength may
differ - Back translation
- Give the same scale to bilinguals
30Other Issues
- Response sets
- Cultural influences on the interpretations of
findings - Cant make causal statements if you didnt test
- Cant assume something is related to, say,
indiv-collect if you didnt assess IC - Researcher bias/value judgments
31What If We Havent Achieved Equivalence?
- 1) Dont comparethe conservative choice
- 2) Reduce the nonequivalence
- 3) Interpret the nonequivalence
- 4) Ignore ita mistake that many make
32Two Basic Positions
- Absolutist
- Relativist
- Emic (between) and Etic (within)
- Most researchers combine these.
33Tips for Doing Your Own CC Research
- Ask someone who is knowledgeable about the
cultures to collaborate with you - Get a full demographic assessment of all your
subjects - Search for measures that have psychometric
reliability and validity for all subjects - Run a pilot study
- Develop a culture-free analysis plan that
involves raw scores as well as a standardized
ones - Have people of different culture backgrounds
check your interpretations of the data - In designing your study and interpreting its
results, give some thought to what kinds of
underlying psychological dimensions of culture
produced or should produce differences
34- Draw a map of the world
- Whittaker and Whittaker, 1972
- Small group discussion of questions
35Ethnocentrism
- Making judgments about other ethnic, national, or
cultural groups and events based on the
observers own ethnic, national, or cultural
groups outlook. - Have a tendency to view the outgroup as
inferior. - Many say we need to rid ourselves of
ethnocentrism. - Others say it is a natural psychological process.
- Alternative view cultural relativismusing
ones own countrys standards to judge that
culture
36From Where Does Ethnocentrism Come?
- Ingrained rules from childhood
- Expect these rules to be widely shared
- Become annoyed, frustrated, angry when others
dont share these - Expect people of other cultures to act like we do
- Flexible ethnocentrism vs. Inflexible
ethnocentrism
37Four Generalizations
- Triandis, 1994
- What goes on in our culture is seen as natural
and correct. What goes on in other cultures is
unnatural and incorrect. - We perceive our ingroup customs as universally
valid. - We unquestionable think that ingroup norms,
rules, and values are correct - We believe that it is natural to help and
cooperate with members of our ingroup, to favor
our ingroup, to feel proud of our ingroup, and to
be hostile/distrustful of outgroups
38Contact Hypothesis
- Contact reduces prejudice when
- Contact is between groups that are roughly in
social, economic, or task-related status - People in authority and or the general social
climate are in favor of and promote the contact - The contact is intimate and informal enough to
allow participants to get to know each other as
individuals - The contact is pleasant and rewarding
- The contact involves cooperation and
interdependence - Superordinate goals are more important than
individual goals
39Contact Hypothesis
- Contact increases prejudice when
- Contact reinforces stereotypes
- Contact produces competition between groups
- Contact emphasizes boundaries between groups
- Contact is unpleasant, involuntary, frustrating
or tense - Contact is between people of unequal status
40Critical Thinking in CC Psych
- Evaluative bias of language
- Differentiating dichotomous variables and
continuous variables - Similarity-uniqueness paradox
- The Barnum effect
- The assimilation bias
- Remember to accommodate
- Representativeness bias
- The availability bias
41Basic Psychological Processes
- Political Difficulties in Doing Research in this
Area - People assume that biology causes the psychology
- Improper reliance on race as a measure of culture
- Biases in interpretation can be used for
personal/political agendas
42Basic Principles
- Sensationprocess by which receptors are
stimulated and transmit their information to
higher brain centers. - Absolute threshold
- Difference threshold
- Sensory adaptation
- Perceptionprocess that organizes various
sensations into meaningful patterns
43Perceptual Set
- Perceptual expectations that make certain
interpretations more likely to occur?makes
perception fast and efficient - Varies by culture
- Personal experiences shape this
44Perception of Depictions
- Related to education and socialization
- Picture scanning
- Linked to reading and writing patterns
- Also draw circles in the way you write
- Three dimensions in two
45Perception of Color
- Three universal dimensions
- Hue
- Brightness
- Saturation
- Is color universal?
- Language-related theories of color perception
- Emphasize the role of language in the
identification and labeling of colors in every
language - Even though the majority of healthy individuals
can identify the same colors, some languages lack
certain words for particular colors - Red always has a separate word, but green and
blue are sometimes not distinguished
linguistically
46Trends in Color Perception
- Adams and Osgood, 1973looked at 23 cultures
- Redsalient and active
- Black and graybad
- White, blue, greengood
- Yellow, white, graypassive
- Around the world, people view white with more
feelings than black - Roberson et al., 2004
- Followed English (11 basic terms) and Himba (5
basic terms) from Namibia 3 and 4 yo
longitudinally - Looked at language and color.
- Acquired color terms the same way.
- Children in both cultures didnt acquire terms in
any particular order, in contrast to the widely
held idea that primary colors green are learned
first
47Optical Illusions
48Why Illusions Occur
- Carpentered world hypothesis
- Front-horizontal foreshortening
- Symbolizing three dimensions in two
49Taste
- All cultures respond to the same 4 basic
tastessweet, salty, sour, bitter - Fifth tasteumamisavoriness
- The ability to taste varies only slightly by
culture - Preference for salty and sweet is universal. All
cultures avoid spoiled or rotten foods - A supertaster is a person whose sense of taste is
significantly sharper than average. Women are
more likely to be supertasters, as are Asians,
Africans, and South Americans. - Regions closer to the equator prefer spicier
foods - Taboo foods vary
50Touch
- Pressure, temperature, pain
- Lots of individual factors affect it
- Anxiety can increase pain, anger can decrease it,
pride can cause people to hide it - Cultural normslabor pain is lower in cultures
where childbirth is not considered to be defiling
and where little help and comfort is offered - Halonen and Santrock (1995)lower access to
health care may create increased threshold for
pain
51Culture and Cognition
- Categorization
- On basis of similarities
- Some appear to be universal
- Tend to categorize on the best examples of basic
forms - But, among cultures, differences may occur in
- The elaboration of language codes for the
categories - Category boundaries
- The organization of categories in superordinated
structures - The treatment of interprototype stimuli
- The rules for the use of categories (Mesquita,
Frijda, Scherer, 1997)
52Sorting
- Within Euro-Am cultures, we use prototypes
- How people sort
- People pick categories by shared attributes
- Young kidssort by striking, superficial
properties like color or number - Sorting by form is slightly more advanced
- Older kidsshared function or taxonomic label
- This development appears to be related to
education - Yupno of Papua New Guinea
- Illiterate adults sorted by form, but educated
sorted by color (Wassman Dagen, 1994) - The highest, most abstract level is that
everything is either hot or cold
53Culture and Memory
- Early workBartlett, 1932
- Ross and Milson, 1970
- Oral traditions better memories
- But memory is not better overall.
- Cole and colleaguesKpelle of Liberia did not
perform better on lists of words than Americans. - Kpelle didnt use categories that were logical
(but imposed by researchers) or learn by rote
(serial position effect, primacy, recency) - Overallsome things like STM and rates of
forgetting seem universal - But mnemonics, strategies, structure vary and
formal education play a role
54Problem Solving
- Drawing inferences and predicting future events
based on analysis of past events - Western value to behave scientifically is to see
the world as it really is - But other modes of thought include intuition and
mysticism - Inferential reasoning
- Using a new combination of previously learned
elements - To study this, have to create new situations
- Kpelle and US children
- Verbal logical reasoning
- SyllogismsIn the north, were there is snow all
year, the bears are white. Novaya Zemyla is in
the far north. What color are the bears? - This formal reasoning is a specific
school-related task - Creativity
- CC, people think of divergent thinking, not
convergent thinking - Also, hard work, risk taking, tolerance for
ambiguity and disorder - But, how creativity is fostered varies
- In high uncertainty avoidance, people prefer
creative people to work through organizational
structures - High power distance, get permission from authority
55Perception of Time
- Westerners define punctuality using precise
measures of time1 min, 1 hr, etc - Prior to information revolution, Arabs used only
3 sets of timeno time at all, now (which
varied), and forever (too long)Hall, 1959 - Akbar (1991)In West, time is a commodity to be
bought and sold, but not in Africatime is very
elastic - What is late?
- Asked US and Brazilian students what is late for
lunch - How long to walk 100 ft down a street at business
time as a sign of time pressure - Japan20.7 sec
- England21.6
- US22.6
- Indonesia27.2
- Hamermesh (2003)US, Germany, Australia, Canada,
South Koreaas wealth increases, people become
more dissatisfied with their lack of time
56Sleep and Dreams
- The amount of sleep that each of us needs is
physiologically determined - In each culture, some sleep for 5-6 hours, some
9-10 hours - Dream
- Monophasiccultures that value cognitive
experiences that take place only during waking
hoursmore materialistic - Polyphasicvalue dreams and treat them as part of
realitymore spiritual view - Manifest contentactual contentvaries, though
falling, eating, swimming, death, examsare
common - Latent contentmeaning
57Altered States of Consciousness
- Phenomena that are different from normal waking
consciousness and include mystic experiences - But ASC are widely reported around the globe
- Trancesleeplike state marked by reduced
sensitivity to stimuli, loss or alteration of
knowledge, automatic motor activity - Worldwide sampleexperienced in 90 of
countriesBourguignon, 1994 - Beliefs about possession
- Need to examine from observers standpoint,
victims view, and communitys view - Associated with stress due to job
dissatisfaction, work conflicts, economic
hardship - May be associated with mental illness
- Also a cultural belief
- Meditation
- Quiet and relaxed state of tranquility in which
person achieves integration of thoughts,
perceptions, and attitudes - Usually obtained through a special principle or
belief - Therapeuticreduces stress