Chapter 9 Flashcards

1
Q

analytic vs. holistic thinking

A
  • Analytic: focusing on objects and their attributes
  • Holistic: focusing on the context as a whole; paying attention to relationships between objects
    • More common worldwide than analytic thinking
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2
Q

attention (and its differences between analytic and holistic thinkers)

A
  • where one’s cognitive activity is directed at a given time
  • Analytic thinkers more likely to focus on discrete parts of a scene (like the most important/central element)
  • Holistic thinkers more likely to focus on entire scene/background context; good at tasks involving figuring out relations among events, bad at tasks involving separating scene into parts (ie. Rod-and-Frame task)
    • Evidence: Japanese participants made more saccades (quick eye movements that shift gaze from one point to another) when looking at a photo compared to Americans → they were systematically scanning the entire image more
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3
Q

paintings in different cultures

A
  • European paintings: In portraits, they have larger figures → draws attention to the people
  • Asian paintings:
    • In portraits, have smaller figures → draws attention to the overall scene
    • Scenes are busier and have more elements, likely due to the fact that Asian cities are busier → reflects their context
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4
Q

2 reasoning styles

A
  • Rule-based reasoning: applying universal rules and laws when trying to make sense of situations
    • Common amongst more analytical thinkers
    • Ex. This flower belongs in group A because they all have curved stems
  • Associative reasoning: looking for relationships/similarity between objects or events in order to make sense of them
    • Common amongst more holistic thinkers
    • Ex. This flower belongs in group B because it looks similar to most of the flowers in this group
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5
Q

Views towards contradiction

A
  • When Americans encounter 2 contradictory statements, they tend to believe the better statement is even more compelling than when they only see 1 statement → denying that the contradiction exists → there is only 1 good argument
  • When Chinese participants encounter 2 contradictory statements, they tend to believe the weaker statement is even more compelling than when they only see 1 statement → accepting the contradiction → difficult to say which one is right or wrong
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6
Q

views toward change

A
  • Westerners tend to believe that change will progress in a linear fashion → ex. If stock is rising, it will probably continue to rise
    • More likely to predict that trends will continue
  • East Asians tend to believe that change happens in fluid and unpredictable ways → ex. If stock is rising, it could fall
    • More likely to predict that trends will reverse
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7
Q

creativity (and its prevalence in eastern vs. western culture)

A
  • Creativity: generation of ideas that are novel and useful/appropriate
    • By certain measures, creativity is more common in Western cultures → Socratic styles of learning emphasize self-discovery
  • – More interested in producing novel things (1st element of creativity) and making breakthrough innovations
  • People in Asian cultures tend to be more focused on mastering techniques or reproducing things (ex. Classical music) than they are on creating something original → Confucian styles of learning emphasize mastery of material
    • More interested in coming up with useful/appropriate solutions (2nd part of creativity) and making incremental improvements
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8
Q

talking and thinking: different cultural values

A
  • The idea that people should participate/speak up in class is rooted in Western ideals → assumes talking reflects thinking and engagement (not the case in Asian culture)
  • Japanese mothers speak less to young children; Chinese infants vocalize less compared to European-Americans → doesn’t indicate less communication though; they just rely more on non-verbal communication
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9
Q

talking and thinking: IQ test study

A
    • Talking is actually related to thinking: thinking out loud reduces scores of Asian-Americans on an IQ test (impairs thinking; whereas just talking/saying alphabet didn’t impact them because they consider it a separate task), but improves the scores of European-Americans (who did worse when they had to talk/say the alphabet without thinking out loud because they consider talking/thinking the same, so talking about something unrelated impairs thinking)
    • Analytic thinking lends itself better to the spoken word than holistic
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10
Q

Linguistic relativity and colour perception

A
  • Different languages have different terms used to describe colours (all have at least 2 - black and white)
  • Early evidence showed that colour perception and memory are largely independent of the words people have to describe colour, but researchers weren’t so sure
    • Robertson expanded on this research because he believed that different colour categories should affect people’s categorical perception: we perceive stimuli as belonging to separate and discrete categories, even though it may actually differ along a continuum
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11
Q

linguistic relativity and colour perception: Robertson’s chip test study

A

given 3 chips, had to say whether chip 1 or chip 2 was closest in colour to the target chip → answered differed cross-culturally depending on how that language categorized colours → language can affect colour perception

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12
Q

linguistic relativity and odor perception

A

English has relatively few terms to describe odors, and we tend to be worse at identifying odors than people from cultures with many olfactory terms → indicates that olfaction vocab influences odor perception/recognition

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13
Q

linguistic relativity and perceptions of agency

A

Languages that use agentive descriptions (ex. “He broke the vase”) compared to non-agentive descriptions (ex. “The vase was broken”) are more likely to remember who did unintentional behaviours (like accidentally breaking the vase)

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14
Q

linguistic relativity and spatial perception:

A
  • both spatial perception and time perception are grounded in linguistic markers available in one’s language
  • English speakers tend to use relative directions that depend on the location of the speaker (ex. “Go left, walk straight, then turn right)
    • Influences our representation of time (ex. We’ll always arrange pictures in order from left-right, with left indicating the beginning)
  • Other languages tend to use absolute terms to give directions (ex. “Go west, walk north, then turn east)
    • They are constantly attending to cardinal directions in their world
    • Influences representation of time (ex. They’ll always arrange pictures from east-west, meaning that the arrangement will differ depending on what direction they’re facing)
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15
Q

linguistic relativity: numerical cognition

A
  • One thing that supports the strong Whorfian hypothesis
  • Our ability to reason with numbers is influenced by culture → cultures that only have numerical terms for 1 and 2 have difficulty reasoning with numbers greater than 2 (can tell general quantities, like 10 nuts is more than 5 nuts, but can’t reason well with the specific numbers)
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