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Experimental priming of independent and interdependent activity does not affect culturally variable psychological processes

Magid, Kesson; Sarkol, Vera; Mesoudi, Alex

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Authors

Profile image of Kesson Magid

Kesson Magid kesson.magid@durham.ac.uk
Honorary/Visiting/Emeritus

Vera Sarkol

Alex Mesoudi



Abstract

Cultural psychologists have shown that people from Western countries exhibit more independent self-construal and analytic (rule-based) cognition than people from East Asia, who exhibit more interdependent self-construal and holistic (relationship-based) cognition. One explanation for this cross-cultural variation is the ecocultural hypothesis, which links contemporary psychological differences to ancestral differences in subsistence and societal cohesion: Western thinking formed in response to solitary herding, which fostered independence, while East Asian thinking emerged in response to communal rice farming, which fostered interdependence. Here, we report two experiments that tested the ecocultural hypothesis in the laboratory. In both, participants played one of two tasks designed to recreate the key factors of working alone and working together. Before and after each task, participants completed psychological measures of independent–interdependent self-construal and analytic–holistic cognition. We found no convincing evidence that either solitary or collective tasks affected any of the measures in the predicted directions. This fails to support the ecocultural hypothesis. However, it may also be that our priming tasks are inappropriate or inadequate for simulating subsistence-related behavioural practices, or that these measures are fixed early in development and therefore not experimentally primable, despite many previous studies that have purported to find such priming effects.

Citation

Magid, K., Sarkol, V., & Mesoudi, A. (2017). Experimental priming of independent and interdependent activity does not affect culturally variable psychological processes. Royal Society Open Science, 4(5), Article 161025. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.161025

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 19, 2017
Online Publication Date May 17, 2017
Publication Date May 17, 2017
Deposit Date Jul 5, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jul 5, 2017
Journal Royal Society Open Science
Electronic ISSN 2054-5703
Publisher The Royal Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 4
Issue 5
Article Number 161025
DOI https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.161025
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1383579

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