Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada V5A 1S6
Institute of Human Origins, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-4101, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2018 Apr 5;373(1743). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0059.
Culture is a human universal, yet it is a source of variation in human psychology, behaviour and development. Developmental researchers are now expanding the geographical scope of research to include populations beyond relatively wealthy Western communities. However, culture and context still play a secondary role in the theoretical grounding of developmental psychology research, far too often. In this paper, we highlight four false assumptions that are common in psychology, and that detract from the quality of both standard and cross-cultural research in development. These assumptions are: (i) , that empirical uniformity is evidence for universality, while any variation is evidence for culturally derived variation; (ii) , that Western populations represent a normal and/or healthy standard against which development in all societies can be compared; (iii) , that population-level differences in developmental timing or outcomes are necessarily due to something lacking among non-Western populations; and (iv) , that using identical research methods will necessarily produce equivalent and externally valid data, across disparate cultural contexts. For each assumption, we draw on cultural evolutionary theory to critique and replace the assumption with a theoretically grounded approach to culture in development. We support these suggestions with positive examples drawn from research in development. Finally, we conclude with a call for researchers to take reasonable steps towards more fully incorporating culture and context into studies of development, by expanding their participant pools in strategic ways. This will lead to a more inclusive and therefore more accurate description of human development.This article is part of the theme issue 'Bridging cultural gaps: interdisciplinary studies in human cultural evolution'.
文化是人类的普遍现象,但它也是人类心理学、行为和发展中变异的来源。发展研究人员现在正在扩大研究的地理范围,将相对富裕的西方社区以外的人群纳入研究范围。然而,文化和背景在发展心理学研究的理论基础中仍然只扮演次要角色,这种情况太常见了。在本文中,我们强调了心理学中存在的四个常见错误假设,这些假设会降低发展心理学研究中标准研究和跨文化研究的质量。这些假设是:(i)实证一致性是普遍性的证据,而任何变化都是文化衍生变化的证据;(ii)西方人群代表了一种正常和/或健康的标准,可以与所有社会的发展进行比较;(iii)发展时间或结果在人口水平上的差异一定是由于非西方人群中缺乏某些东西;(iv)使用相同的研究方法必然会在不同的文化背景下产生等效和外部有效的数据。对于每一个假设,我们都利用文化进化理论来批判和取代该假设,提出一种在发展中考虑文化的理论基础方法。我们用发展研究中的积极例子来支持这些建议。最后,我们呼吁研究人员通过以战略性的方式扩大参与者群体,采取合理措施将文化和背景更充分地纳入发展研究中。这将导致对人类发展更具包容性,因此也更准确的描述。本文是主题为“弥合文化差距:人类文化进化的跨学科研究”的一部分。