Issues and debates: cultural bias Flashcards
what is cultural bias
- A tendency to ignore cultural differences and interpret all behaviour through the ‘lens’ of one’s own culture.
what is ethnocentrism
- judging other cultures by the values and standards of one’s own culture.
-> can result in feelings of superiority for one’s own culture which can lead to problems of prejudice and bias.
what is cultural relativism
- The idea that norms, values, ethics and standards differ from culture to culture and so can only be understood within specific social and cultural contexts.
What is alpha bias (in terms of cultural bias)
- Alpha bias assumes that there are real and enduring differences between cultural groups. For example differences between collective and individualistic societies.
What is beta bias (in terms of cultural bias)
- Beta bias refers to theories which ignore or minimise any differences in culture.
-> For example the use of IQ tests on non-western cultures.
what is Berry’s take on cultural relativism?
- Suggests psychologists have often been guilty of using imposed etics.
-> when we impose western beliefs on people from other cultures or belief systems and judge them by it! - Instead we should use emic approaches – this functions from within a given culture and identifies behaviour that is specific to that culture.
What is etic?
- specific culture’s norms are applied to other cultures to find universal laws -> e.g. language, attachment.
- Sample of the population cannot generalise the findings to all cultures (imposed etic).
What is emic?
- Studies variations between groups.
-> may exaggerate differences between groups whilst neglecting differences within groups.
Give an example of ethnocentrism and imposed etics in intelligence testing (exams) (Brislin)
- Brislin looked at ethnocentrism and imposed etics in intelligence tests -> found that in Western cultures we often need to do things against the clock.
-> however people of Uganda characterise intelligence as slow, careful and deliberate thought (Wober).
Give examples of scientific racism in research (Shockley) (Goddard)
- Goddard (1917): race and IQ - Russians, Jews, Hungarians and Italians were ‘feeble minded’.
- Shockley (1952): genetic reasons why Black people tended to score lower on IQ tests than White people.
Give an example of cultural bias in IQ testing (Yerkes)
- Yerkes devised IQ tests for the military.
- showed a correlation between the further north in the world your heritage was and your IQ.
- later shown to be false as the test relied on participants understanding Northern European and American cultures to get a high score.
Give an example of cultural bias in the diagnosis of mental health disorders (Cochrane and Sashidharan)
- Cochrane and Sashidharan (95) – African-Caribbean immigrants are 7x more likely to be diagnosed with mental health issues.
- To combat this problem, DSM4 (diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders) included in its appendix a list 25 culture-bound syndromes.
Examples…
-> brain fog (difficulty concentrating, remembering and thinking – West Africa).
Give one way of countering ethnocentrism
- encourage indigenous psychologies – the development of different groups of theories in different countries.
- Afrocentrism is a movement whose central proposition is that all black people have their roots in Africa and therefore psychological theories concerning these people must be African centred and express African values.
- Afrocentrism disputes the view that European values are universally appropriate descriptions of human behaviour that apply equally to Europeans and non-Europeans alike
What is a problem with the emic approach and how can the etic approach be useful to counter this? (Buss)
- only helps our understanding of behaviour within that culture.
- etic approach seeks universals of behaviour -> one way to achieve this, while avoiding cultural bias, is to use indigenous researchers in each cultural setting.
- Buss did this in his classic study on mate preferences -> data collected from people in 37 different cultures in order to look at universal behaviour -> in each cultural setting there were 3 local researchers.
list the evaluations for solutions to cultural bias
positive:
- evidence of differences within individualism and collectivism
- evidence of universality
- challenges implicit assumptions
Negative:
- operationalisation of variables