| Literature DB >> 21962721 |
Serge Caparos1, Lubna Ahmed, Andrew J Bremner, Jan W de Fockert, Karina J Linnell, Jules Davidoff.
Abstract
There is substantial evidence that populations in the Western world exhibit a local bias compared to East Asian populations that is widely ascribed to a difference between individualistic and collectivist societies. However, we report that traditional Himba - a remote interdependent society - exhibit a strong local bias compared to both Japanese and British participants in the Ebbinghaus illusion and in a similarity-matching task with hierarchical figures. Critically, we measured the effect of exposure to an urban environment on local bias in the Himba. Even a brief exposure to an urban environment caused a shift in processing style: the local bias was reduced in traditional Himba who had visited a local town and even more reduced in urbanised Himba who had moved to that town on a permanent basis. We therefore propose that exposure to an urban environment contributes to the global bias found in Western and Japanese populations.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21962721 DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2011.08.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cognition ISSN: 0010-0277