| Literature DB >> 26760972 |
Alex Mesoudi1,2, Kesson Magid2, Delwar Hussain3.
Abstract
Cultural psychologists have shown that people from Western, Educated, Industrialised, Rich, Democratic (WEIRD) countries often exhibit different psychological processing to people from less-WEIRD countries. The former exhibit more individualistic and less collectivistic social orientation, and more analytic and less holistic cognition, than non-Westerners. Yet the mechanisms responsible for maintaining this cultural variation are unclear. Immigration is an ideal 'natural experiment' for uncovering such mechanisms. We used a battery of psychological measures previously shown to vary cross-culturally to compare the social orientation and cognitive style of 286 residents of East London from three cultural backgrounds: (i) 1st-generation British Bangladeshi immigrants; (ii) 2nd-generation British Bangladeshis raised in the UK to Bangladeshi-raised parents; and (iii) non-migrants whose parents were born and raised in the UK. Model comparison revealed that individualism and dispositional attribution, typical of Western societies, are driven primarily by horizontal cultural transmission (e.g. via mass media), with parents and other family members having little or no effect, while collectivism, social closeness and situational attribution were driven by a mix of vertical/oblique cultural transmission (e.g. via family contact) and horizontal cultural transmission. These individual-level transmission dynamics can explain hitherto puzzling population-level phenomena, such as the partial acculturation of 2nd-generation immigrants on measures such as collectivism (due to the mix of vertical and horizontal cultural transmission), or the observation in several countries of increasing individualism (which is transmitted horizontally and therefore rapidly) despite little corresponding change in collectivism (which is transmitted partly vertically and therefore more slowly). Further consideration of cultural transmission mechanisms, in conjunction with the study of migrant communities and model comparison statistics, can shed light on the persistence of, and changes in, culturally-variable psychological processes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26760972 PMCID: PMC4711941 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147162
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Participant demographics.
| Non-migrant | 2nd-generation British Bangladeshi | 1st-generation British Bangladeshi | All | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n (n female) | 99 (50) | 79 (40) | 108 (54) | 286 (144) |
| Age, mean (sd, range) | 35.07 (15.11, 18–73) | 26.09 (7.91, 18–52) | 39.48 (12.13, 19–75) | 34.26 (13.41, 18–75) |
| Religiosity (min = 1, max = 7), mean (sd) | 1.86 (1.21) | 4.10 (1.44) | 4.83 (1.34) | 3.60 (1.85) |
| Family contact, mean (sd) | 3.09 (2.44) | 7.11 (4.83) | 7.33 (5.23) | 5.73 (4.72) |
| Family interaction, mean (sd) | 2.61 (2.04) | 6.39 (5.90) | 6.79 (6.05) | 5.09 (5.25) |
| Years of education, mean (sd) | 16.31 (3.96) | 16.90 (4.07) | 14.28 (6.04) | 15.71 (4.99) |
| Occupation, n (secondary / tertiary / graduate) | 26 / 37 / 16 | 21 / 31 / 15 | 33 / 28 / 7 | 80 / 96 / 38 |
| Languages spoken, mean (sd) | 1.12 (0.39) | 2.01 (0.44) | 2.13 (0.95) | 1.75 (0.81) |
| UK TV watched per week (hours), mean (sd) | 3.07 (2.26) | 3.51 (2.38) | 2.66 (1.52) | 3.03 (2.06) |
| Internet use per week (hours), mean (sd) | 3.26 (1.51) | 4.12 (2.91) | 2.72 (1.88) | 3.29 (2.17) |
| UK print media use (min = 1, max = 4), mean (sd) | 2.70 (0.77) | 2.50 (0.82) | 2.19 (0.82) | 2.45 (0.83) |
| Heritage culture identification (min = 1, max = 7), mean (sd) | N/A | 5.32 (1.07) | 5.85 (1.03) | 5.60 (1.07) |
| UK culture identification (min = 1, max = 7), mean (sd) | N/A | 5.27 (1.08) | 4.51 (1.36) | 4.83 (1.29) |
| Age of migration, mean (sd) | N/A | N/A | 21.57 (6.60) | N/A |
Notes: ‘Family contact’ = number of family members seen in person during an average week; ‘Family interaction’ = number of family members communicated by phone/internet during an average week. ‘Occupation’ is categorised into level of education needed: secondary (school leaving exams required), tertiary (university degree required) or graduate (post-university qualification required, e.g. Masters). Self-reported acculturation measures (heritage and UK culture identification) were only obtained from the British Bangladeshi groups, and age of migration only applies to the 1st generation group.
Tasks used in the present study, and previously-found cultural differences.
| Measure | Description | Previous findings | Key reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Participants are asked their agreement on 7-point Likert scales with 16 statements indicative of individualism and collectivism. | English-speaking countries are typically more individualistic and less collectivistic than the rest of the world. | [ | |
| Participants choose one of 7 pairs of more or less overlapping circles that best describes themselves and their most significant other. | East Asians typically choose more-overlapping circles than North Americans, indicating higher social closeness. | [ | |
| Participants estimate the percentage of the UK population, of the same age and gender, who are better than them on 10 desirable characteristics (e.g. attractiveness, intelligence). | North Americans typically show higher or unrealistically biased self-enhancement, with most participants rating themselves above-average, compared to East Asians. | [ | |
| Participants circle two objects that go together within a series of 10 triads (e.g. horse, saddle, goat). | North Americans typically use rule-based similarity, e.g. grouping horse and goat (as both are farm animals), while East Asians typically use relationships, e.g. grouping horse and saddle (as horses wear saddles) | [ | |
| Participants read descriptions of two real-life events (Ben Johnson cheating in the Olympics; a physics student shooting his supervisor) and rate agreement on 7-point Likert scales with various explanations. | North Americans typically agree more with dispositional explanations (e.g. “Johnson took steroids because of his excessive drive to win”) and less with situational attributions (e.g.“Johnson took steroids because athletics had become too competitive”) than East Asians. | [ | |
| Participants draw a landscape scene, including a house, tree, river, person, horizon and any other additional objects | North Americans typically draw fewer additional objects and a lower horizon, given a focus on fewer, focal objects and simple scenes (analytic cognition), while East Asians typically include many objects and high horizons to display their interconnections (holistic cognition) | [ |
Summary of predicted models used in model comparison.
| Model | Predictors |
|---|---|
| DEMOGRAPHIC | Age, sex |
| PARENTSBIRTH | Age, sex, country of parents’ birth (UK or Bangladesh) |
| COUNTRYBIRTH | Age, sex, country of participant’s birth (UK or Bangladesh) |
| CULTURALGROUP | Age, sex, country of parents’ birth, country of participant’s birth |
| HORIZONTAL | Age, sex, country of participant’s birth, UK print media use, internet use, UK TV use, years of education |
| VERTICAL | Age, sex, country of parents’ birth, family direct contact, family indirect interaction, heritage language fluency, religiosity. |
| GLOBAL | All predictors listed above |
Summary of culture-only means and regression coefficients.
Means and standard deviations are raw values before transformation. Unstandardised regression coefficients estimate the difference denoted in the column heading, with 95% confidence intervals in square brackets. Note that in the regressions several measures are logged, and some models are non-linear (see text for details), so coefficients should not be compared across models/measures. Differences comprising CIs that do not cross zero are shown in bold. 1st gen = 1st generation British Bangladeshi, 2nd gen = 2nd generation British BangladeshiFor categorisation, higher values indicate holistic cognition, lower indicate analytic.
| Measure | Mean (sd), before transformation | Unstandardised regression coefficients [95% CI] on group differences | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st gen | 2nd gen | Non-migrants | 1st gen - 2nd gen | 1st gen–non-migrants | 2nd gen–non-migrants | |
| Individualism | 5.25 (0.82) | 5.13 (0.83) | 4.98 (0.95) | 0.05 [-0.06, 0.15] | 0.08 [-0.02, 0.19] | 0.04 [-0.07, 0.15] |
| Collectivism | 6.29 (0.57) | 5.93 (0.66) | 5.45 (0.77) | |||
| Closeness | 4.18 (1.79) | 4.84 (1.44) | 4.93 (1.87) | 0.19 [-0.42, 0.79] | ||
| Self-enhancement | 37.92 (13.97) | 40.86 (17.70) | 38.14 (15.48) | -2.72 [-8.22, 2.77] | 0.22 [-4.95, 5.38] | 2.94 [-2.65, 8.53] |
| Categorisation (holistic) | 0.83 (0.27) | 0.82 (0.27) | 0.76 (0.29) | 0.06 [-0.58, 0.69] | 0.41 [-0.15, 0.98] | 0.36 [-0.26, 0.97] |
| Dispositional attribution | 4.94 (1.01) | 5.14 (0.79) | 5.27 (0.88) | -0.19 [-0.51, 0.13] | -0.13 [-0.46, 0.19] | |
| Situational attribution | 5.16 (1.08) | 4.87 (1.04) | 4.38 (1.01) | 0.29 [-0.08, 0.65] | ||
| Drawing task: Horizon ratio | 0.59 (0.22) | 0.59 (0.18) | 0.60 (0.18) | 0.01 [-0.07, 0.08] | -0.004 [-0.07, 0.06] | -0.01 [-0.09, 0.06] |
| Drawing task: Objects | 15.43 (24.95) | 11.91 (11.39) | 14.38 (18.98) | 0.02 [-0.36, 0.41] | -0.03 [-0.40, 0.33] | -0.06 [-0.45, 0.33] |
Fig 1Cultural group differences indicated as meaningful by the culture-only regression analyses, for (A) social orientation, (B) closeness to a significant other, and (C) dispositional/situational attribution.
Error bars show 95% confidence intervals. 1st gen = 1st generation British Bangladeshi, 2nd gen = 2nd generation British Bangladeshi.
Best-fitting predicted models.
∆i = difference in AICc from best-fitting model; ωi = Akaike weight. See text and Table 3 for model specifications. All models with ∆i<4 are listed. ∆i for best-fitting models is always 0 and so not shown. For four measures (self-enhancement, categorisation, horizon ratio and additional objects), the global model did not fit the data so model comparison was not possible. See S1 Table for full model comparison statistics.
| Measure | Best fitting models (where ∆i < 4) |
|---|---|
| Individualism | HORIZONTAL (ωi = 0.80) |
| Collectivism | CULTURALGROUP (ωi = 0.58), GLOBAL (ωi = 0.25, ∆i = 1.70), VERTICAL (ωi = 0.16, ∆i = 2.57) |
| Closeness | PARENTSBIRTH (ωi = 0.47), VERTICAL (ωi = 0.27, ∆i = 1.08), CULTURALGROUP (ωi = 0.18, ∆i = 1.90) |
| Self-enhancement | Poor global model fit |
| Categorisation | Poor global model fit |
| Dispositional attribution | COUNTRYBIRTH (ωi = 0.41), CULTURALGROUP (ωi = 0.23, ∆i = 1.20), VERTICAL (ωi = 0.16, ∆i = 1.90), PARENTSBIRTH (ωi = 0.12, ∆i = 2.51), HORIZONTAL (ωi = 0.06, ∆i = 3.86) |
| Situational attribution | CULTURALGROUP (ωi = 0.53), PARENTSBIRTH (ωi = 0.43, ∆i = 0.40) |
| Drawing task: Horizon ratio | Poor global model fit |
| Drawing task: Objects | Poor global model fit |
Summary of exploratory regression models.
| Measure | Predictors in best-fitting model | Model fit |
|---|---|---|
| Individualism | Cultural group: 1st gen > non-migrant | F(5,201) = 6.99, p < .001, adj-R2 = .13 |
| Collectivism | Cultural group: 1st gen > non-migrant | F(5,262) = 21.11, p < .001, adj-R2 = .27 |
| Closeness | 2nd gen x age | Χ2(5) = 29.55, p < .001, pseudo-R2 = .03 |
| Self-enhancement | 1st gen x female x years of education | F(11,268) = 2.58, p = .004, adj-R2 = .06 |
| Holistic categorisation | Cultural group: 1st gen > non-migrant | F(5,202) = 3.62, p = .004, pseudo-R2 = .08 |
| Dispositional attribution | Age | F(5,207) = 3.12, p = .009, adj-R2 = .05 |
| Situational attribution | 2nd gen x languages | F(5,279) = 7.79, p < .001, adj-R2 = .11 |
| Drawing task: Horizon ratio | No significant predictors | N/A |
| Drawing task: Objects | No significant predictors | N/A |
*p < .05
**p < .01
***p < .001
Where best-fitting model includes interactions, only highest-level significant interactions are listed, not single predictors (even if significant). ‘languages’ = number of languages spoken. 1st gen = 1st generation British Bangladeshi, 2nd gen = 2nd generation British Bangladeshi. See S2 Table for full model details.
Fig 2Significant interactions that emerged from the exploratory regression analyses, for (A) closeness, (B) self-enhancement and (C) situational attribution.
Shaded areas show conditional means.