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Cultural Orientation of Self-Bias in Perceptual Matching
Author(s) -
Mengyin Jiang,
Shirley K. M. Wong,
Harry K. S. Chung,
Yang Sun,
Janet H. Hsiao,
Jie Sui,
Glyn W. Humphreys
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
frontiers in psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.947
H-Index - 110
ISSN - 1664-1078
DOI - 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01469
Subject(s) - psychology , perception , social psychology , context (archaeology) , identity (music) , matching (statistics) , self , cognitive psychology , cross cultural studies , acoustics , biology , paleontology , statistics , physics , mathematics , neuroscience
Previous research on cross-culture comparisons found that Western cultures tend to value independence and the self is construed as an autonomous individual, while Eastern cultures value interdependence and self-identity is perceived as embedded among friends and family members ( Markus and Kitayama, 1991 ). The present experiment explored these cultural differences in the context of a paradigm developed by Sui et al. (2012) , which found a bias toward the processing of self-relevant information using perceptual matching tasks. In this task, each neutral shape (i.e., triangle, circle, square) is associated with a person (i.e., self, friend, stranger), and faster and more accurate responses were found to formerly neutral stimuli tagged to the self compared to stimuli tagged to non-self. With this paradigm, the current study examined cross-cultural differences in the self-bias effect between participants from Hong Kong and the United Kingdom. Results demonstrated a reliable self-bias effect across groups consistent with previous studies. Importantly, a variation was identified in a larger self-bias toward stranger-associated stimuli in the United Kingdom participants than the Hong Kong participants. This suggested the cultural modulation of the self-bias effect in perceptual matching.

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