Cross-Cultural Psychology Flashcards

1
Q

Why do groups differ?

A

Ecological environment and Social environment

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2
Q

What do cross-culture studies help us to understand?

A

Differences in development and commonalities in development

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3
Q

What is culture?

A

Information acquired from other members of a group . A group of people who have a shared context.

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4
Q

What percentage of all psychological participants are from western industrialised countries ? What percentage of the world population does this host?

A

96% of all participants are from western industrialised countries. 12% of the world’s population

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5
Q

What percentage of participants are psychology undergraduates?

A

70%

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6
Q

What does cultural psychology study?

A

The variability of human behaviour
The universal of human behaviour (capturing diversity)
The interaction between inherited predispositions and cultural context

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7
Q

What methods are used in cultural psychology?

A

Anthropological record
Observation
Survey
Experimentation

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8
Q

What makes up the triadic perspectives?

A

Cross cultural, developmental and comparative

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9
Q

What is vertical learning?

A

Learning that occurs across generations (from more experienced individuals)

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10
Q

What is horizontal learning ?

A

Learning from peers

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11
Q

What is individual learning in cultures?

A

A change throughout a culture that spreads throughout a community

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12
Q

Explain the ratchet effect

A

Modifications and improvements stay in the community with relatively little loss until further changes ratchet things up again.

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13
Q

What does WEIRD stand for?

A

Western Educated Industrialised Rich Democratic

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14
Q

Explain the ‘far, far away’ approach to researching visual perception.

A

This is the maximum difference approach so this could be researching North America and Japan. People in North American culture are thought to student to a focal object and looking at it analytically. Meanwhile Japanese cultures are thought to be more attuned to things around the object . They take more of a holistic approach, looking at the contextual information - the ‘bigger picture’. Different tasks require different types of judgement.

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15
Q

Explain the ‘everywhere’ approach to researching visual perception.

A

This is a broad sweep approach. An example of this is the Muller Lyer Illusion. <—->. >—-< . Ppts were asked if one of the lines were longer than the other. People who lived in nomadic environments were less likely to see that they were the same. compared to western cultures that spend time in ‘box shaped’ rooms.

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16
Q

Explain cross-cultural research into sound perception.

A

Irrelevant sound perception was found to decline throughout development. Infants (6-7 months old) are therefore universal listeners as they can discriminate against retroflex vs dental stop sounds.

17
Q

Explain cross-cultural research into spatial cognition findings.

A

Preverbal children from different cultures shared an inherited preference to process small space geocentrically. Learning a geocentric language builds on this inherited preference. Learning an egocentric language emphasises egocentric spatial.

18
Q

Explain the two cultural intelligence hypotheses

A

1) species with improved social learning abilities will also show better asocial learning abilities and will therefore have generally advanced cognitive skills.

2) Humans have not evolved higher general intelligence but rather a specific set of social cognitive skills, this leads to humans being ‘ultra social’.

19
Q

What are the core components of cultures?

A

The spreading of newly learned techniques

20
Q

How does learning spread in captive primates?

A

A human teaches one member of the group who acts as a model on how to open the box . The new techniques often spreads throughout the group within a few weeks.

21
Q

What makes humans ‘copy cats’?

A

Humans (children 2-4 years) imitate even when it does not make sense. Meanwhile chimpanzees imitate and emulate.

22
Q

Summarise cross-cultural psychology

A
  • Possible cultural differences need to be taken into account In research
  • Most of our evidence is biased
  • Different methods are possible when comparing different cultures
  • Important components of culture can be found in animals
23
Q

What percentage of all psychology citations come from the United States?

A

70%

24
Q

What do findings from the line study show?

A

Shows that people from industrialised societies consistently occupy the extreme end of the human distribution.

25
Q

What did Rawlings, Boysen & Davila-Ross find?

A

They studied 3 different chimpanzee colonies and found that each colony used a different technique to open hard-shelled fruit. This showed cross-colony differences in foraging techniques.

26
Q

What does cross cultural psychology aim to identify?

A

Differences and commonalities between cultures during development

27
Q

What is a core component of culture?

A

The spreading of newly learned techniques

28
Q

What was found concerning hand clasping grooming in apes?

A

There were different hand clasping grooming techniques across colonies

29
Q
A