Chavajay P, Rogoff B
Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz 95064, USA.
Dev Psychol. 1999 Jul;35(4):1079-90. doi: 10.1037//0012-1649.35.4.1079.
Cultural variation occurred in time-sharing of attention during videotaped home visits with sixteen 14-20-month-old toddlers and their caregivers from a Guatemalan Mayan community and a middle-class community of U.S. European-descent families. The Mayan caregivers and their toddlers were more likely to attend simultaneously to spontaneously occurring competing events than were the U.S. caregivers and their toddlers, who were more likely to alternate their attention between competing events and, in the case of the caregivers. to focus attention on one event at a time. This cultural contrast in prevalence of simultaneous or nonsimultaneous attention occurred in both a 10-min segment of child-focused activities and a 10-min segment of adult-focused activities, replicating and extending the findings of B. Rogoff, J. Mistry, A. Göncü, and C. Mosier (1993), which implicated cultural processes in attention.
对来自危地马拉玛雅社区以及美国欧洲裔中产阶级社区的16名14至20个月大的幼儿及其照料者进行了家庭录像探访,期间发现了注意力分配的文化差异。玛雅照料者及其幼儿比美国照料者及其幼儿更有可能同时关注自发出现的相互竞争的事件,而美国照料者及其幼儿更有可能在相互竞争的事件之间交替注意力,并且就照料者而言,他们更有可能一次只专注于一个事件。这种同时或不同时注意力的文化差异在以儿童为中心的活动的10分钟片段和以成人活动为中心的10分钟片段中均有出现,这重复并扩展了B. 罗戈夫、J. 米斯特里、A. 贡丘和C. 莫西尔(1993年)的研究结果,该研究表明文化过程与注意力有关。