assumes there are real
and enduring differences
between cultural groups
example
Takano and Osaka (1999)
reviewed 15 studies that
compared the US and
Japan in terms or
individualism/collectivism
Annotations:
Individualism - the principle of being independent
collectivism - the principle of giving a group priority over each individual
found 14/15
studies did
NOT support
the common
view
we would expect members of individualist
cultures to be less conformist because they
are less orientated towards group norms
Beta bias
ignores or minimises
cultural differences
example
intelligence tests are
devised by Western
psychologists who
assume that their view of
intelligence applies to all
cultures equally
when such
tests are used
on non-Western
cultures, they
may appear less
intelligent
Ethnocentrism
the use of our own ethnic/cultural group as a
basis for judgements about other groups
a tendency to view the beliefs, customs and
behaviours of our own group as 'normal',
whereas those of other groups are 'strange'
Cultural Relativism
all cultures are equally worthy of
respect and that in studying
another culture we need to try to
understand the way that a
particular culture sees the world
Eurocentrism
a form of
ethnocentrism but
emphasis is on
Western/European
theories and ideas,
at the expense of
other cultures
Bias in studies
most psychological
research is carried out
on Americans
Smith and
Bond (1998) -
66% American,
32% European,
2% rest of the
world
Sears (1986) - 82% undergraduates,
51% psychology students
psychology findings
are not only
unrepresentative on a
global scale, but also
within Western culture
Indigenous
psychologies
'psychology' has traditionally meant Western
psychology, with the assumption that psychological
knowledge can be applied to the whole of humankind
because it holds true in Western society
psychology has created
the need for an alternative
view of human behaviour
one based on
indigenous
(native) cultures
most of this research is
done in Asia
Yamagishi (2002) -
there are more social
psychologists in Asia
than in Europe
but almost absent in Africa
South Africa has a Western
individualist conception of
psychology, and fails to
reflect it's collectivist
indigenous culture
90% of psychologists are white,
13% of the population are white
Afrocentrism
a movement whose central proposition is that all blacks
have their roots in Africa and that psychological theories
must be African-centred and must express African values
disputes the view that European values are universally
appropriate descriptions of human behaviour that apply
equally to Europeans and non-Europeans alike
suggests values and cultures of Europeans devalue non-European
people and are irrelevant to the life and culture of Africans
The emic-etic distinction
The emic approach
emphasises the
uniqueness of every culture
by focussing on culturally
specific phenomena
typically involves indigenous researchers
studying their own cultural group
findings tend to be significant only to the
understanding of behaviour within that culture
The etic approach
assumes that human
behaviour is universal
study behaviour from outside a culture and
produce findings that are considered to have
universal application in psychology
HOWEVER
derived etic
acknowledges the role of cultural
factors and recognises that human
behaviour differs from one culture
to another and the use of methods
from other cultures is inappropriate
imposed etic
where cultural influences are ignored
assessments are made using standard (Western)
instruments, and interpretations made at face value