Title of article :
Cross cultural differences in unconscious knowledge
Author/Authors :
Kiyokawa، نويسنده , , Sachiko and Dienes، نويسنده , , Zoltلn and Tanaka، نويسنده , , Daisuke and Yamada، نويسنده , , Ayumi and Crowe، نويسنده , , Louise، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
9
From page :
16
To page :
24
Abstract :
Previous studies have indicated cross cultural differences in conscious processes, such that Asians have a global preference and Westerners a more analytical one. We investigated whether these biases also apply to unconscious knowledge. In Experiment 1, Japanese and UK participants memorized strings of large (global) letters made out of small (local) letters. The strings constituted one sequence of letters at a global level and a different sequence at a local level. Implicit learning occurred at the global and not the local level for the Japanese but equally at both levels for the English. In Experiment 2, the Japanese preference for global over local processing persisted even when structure existed only at the local but not global level. In Experiment 3, Japanese and UK participants were asked to attend to just one of the levels, global or local. Now the cultural groups performed similarly, indicating that the bias largely reflects preference rather than ability (although the data left room for residual ability differences). In Experiment 4, the greater global advantage of Japanese rather English was confirmed for strings made of Japanese kana rather than Roman letters. That is, the cultural difference is not due to familiarity of the sequence elements. In sum, we show for the first time that cultural biases strongly affect the type of unconscious knowledge people acquire.
Keywords :
cultural differences , Unconscious knowledge , selective attention , Implicit Learning , Global/local , artificial grammar learning
Journal title :
Cognition
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Cognition
Record number :
2077428
Link To Document :
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