Culture bias Flashcards
culture
= the values, beliefs + patterns of behaviour shared by a group of individuals
culture bias
= the tendency to judge people in terms of one’s own cultural assumptions
alpha bias (not in spec but need anyway)
= when a theory assumes cultural groups are profoundly different
beta bias (not in spec but need anyway)
= when real cultural differences are ignored or minimised - can be seen in universal research designs drawing conclusions that assume all cultures are the same
ethnocentrism
= seeing the world from one’s own cultural perspective + believing it to be accurate
– lack of awareness that other ways of seeing things can be just as valid as one’s own
cultural relativism
= insists that behaviour can only be properly understood if cultural context is taken into account
universality
= can be applied to all people irrespective of culture or gender
emic approach
= if certain culture studied then results should only be relevant to that culture
etic approach
= behaviour can be applied regardless of culture - universal to all cultures
psychopathology link…
…definitions of abnormality demonstrate culture bias - abnormality varies from culture to culture
– found that African-Caribbeans in Britain are diagnosed as psychologically ill on basis of behaviour e.g. hallucinations - perceived as normal in their subculture
attachment link…
…Ainsworth’s strange situation = ethnocentric research - designed in America to assess attachment styles assuming the strange situation has same meaning for infants from other cultures
– argued to demonstrate imposed etic
contrast to Ainsworth…
… cross cultural research found differences in findings - e.g. Germany = higher rate of insecure-avoidant behaviour - result of methodology used as encouraged to be more independent + therefore respond differently to strange situation
cultural relativism…
… opposite to ethnocentrism
– appreciates behaviour varies between cultures - behaviour can only be fully understood by studying it w/in culture where it originates (could lead to A bias as may. be assumed behaviour is only relevant to one culture)
cultural relativism - emic/etic?
…suggests an emic approach
– cultural bias occurs where researcher assumes that an emic construct (behaviour specific to single culture) is actually etic (behaviour universal to all cultures)
application summary - abnormality + attachment…
…social norms are culturally relative + context is vital in understanding behaviour
– attachment type only understood if child rearing + parenting style taken into account