Management Division.
Department of Psychology.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2020 Mar;118(3):436-456. doi: 10.1037/pspi0000188. Epub 2019 Apr 11.
When cultures have different norms for the same situation, does culture affect memory by influencing the weight individuals assign to information or also by affecting the meaning of information itself, influencing memory via categorization? We present 4 experiments showing that, in relying on contrasting cultural norms of reciprocity (Studies 1 and 2) and spiritual purity (Studies 3 and 4), Indians and Americans differ in their interpretation of and memory for identical information. Studies 1 ( = 123) and 3 ( = 78), utilizing cued-recall, and Studies 2 ( = 143) and 4 ( = 79), utilizing multiple-choice incidental-memory tests, show cultural differences in memory and categorization in culturally relevant normative domains. In Studies 1 and 2 Americans, applying their own culture-specific reciprocity norms, were more likely than Indians to interpret gifts given after receiving help as implying reciprocity. Hence, Americans (and not Indians) tended to categorize information about gifts in terms of whether it was norm-consistent or inconsistent, evidenced by memory that reflected greater within-category confusions. In Studies 3 and 4 Indians, applying their own culture-specific norms of purity, were more likely than Americans to interpret images of shoes on sacred objects as implying spiritual impurity. Thus, Indians (and not Americans) tended to categorize information about shoes in terms of whether it was norm-violating or nonviolating, evidenced by memory that reflected greater within-category confusions. Applying culturally variable norms to the same situation leads to different understandings of the same behavior, resulting in memory that reflects . We highlight the role that culture-specific norms play in cognitively predisposing individuals to organize information in the environment. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
当不同文化对同一情况有不同的规范时,文化是否会通过影响个体对信息的重视程度来影响记忆,或者是否会通过分类来影响信息本身的意义,从而影响记忆?我们提出了 4 项实验,表明在依赖互惠(研究 1 和 2)和精神纯洁(研究 3 和 4)的对比文化规范时,印度人和美国人对相同信息的解释和记忆存在差异。研究 1(=123)和 3(=78)采用线索回忆,研究 2(=143)和 4(=79)采用多项选择偶然记忆测试,在文化相关的规范领域显示了记忆和分类方面的文化差异。在研究 1 和 2 中,美国人应用自己特定文化的互惠规范,比印度人更有可能将在收到帮助后收到的礼物解释为暗示互惠。因此,美国人(而不是印度人)倾向于根据信息是否符合规范来对礼物信息进行分类,这反映在记忆中,即更混淆了类别内的信息。在研究 3 和 4 中,印度人应用自己特定文化的纯洁规范,比美国人更有可能将鞋子的图像解释为对神圣物体的精神污染。因此,印度人(而不是美国人)倾向于根据信息是否违反规范来对鞋子信息进行分类,这反映在记忆中,即更混淆了类别内的信息。将文化可变规范应用于同一情况会导致对同一行为的不同理解,从而导致反映的记忆。我们强调特定文化规范在认知上促使个体对环境中的信息进行组织的作用。(APA 版权所有,2020)