Long-term cultural experiences influence neural response to one's own and friend's faces. The present study investigated whether an individual's culturally specific pattern of neural activity to faces can be modulated by temporary access to other cultural frameworks using a self-construal priming paradigm. Event-related potentials were recorded from British and Chinese adults during judgments of orientations of one's own and friend's faces after they were primed with independent and interdependent self-construals. We found that an early frontal negative activity at 220-340 ms (the anterior N2) differentiated between one's own and friend's faces in both cultural groups. Most remarkably, for British particip...
Previous research suggests that individuals from individualistic and collectivistic cultures, due to...
Self-construal priming modulates human behavior and associated neural activity. However, the neural ...
Behavioral studies suggest that self-construals play a key role in modulation of cognitive processin...
Long-term cultural experiences influence neural response to one's own and friend's faces. The presen...
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Project 31170973; 30910...
Self-construals are different between Western and East Asian cultures in that the Western self empha...
Self-construals are different between Western and East Asian cultures in that the Western self empha...
Western cultures encourage self-construals independent of social contexts, whereas East Asian cultur...
& People living in multicultural environments often encoun-ter situations which require them to ...
Culture affects the psychological structure of self and results in two distinct types of self-repres...
Previous work shows that when an image of a face is presented immediately prior to each trial of a s...
The present study investigated whether and how self-construal priming influences empathic neural res...
Although it is well documented that cultures influence basic cognitive processes such as attention, ...
The fundamentally social nature of humans is revealed in their exquisitely high sensitivity to poten...
Two experiments showed that American (vs. Chinese) culture priming influences Beijing Chinese underg...
Previous research suggests that individuals from individualistic and collectivistic cultures, due to...
Self-construal priming modulates human behavior and associated neural activity. However, the neural ...
Behavioral studies suggest that self-construals play a key role in modulation of cognitive processin...
Long-term cultural experiences influence neural response to one's own and friend's faces. The presen...
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Project 31170973; 30910...
Self-construals are different between Western and East Asian cultures in that the Western self empha...
Self-construals are different between Western and East Asian cultures in that the Western self empha...
Western cultures encourage self-construals independent of social contexts, whereas East Asian cultur...
& People living in multicultural environments often encoun-ter situations which require them to ...
Culture affects the psychological structure of self and results in two distinct types of self-repres...
Previous work shows that when an image of a face is presented immediately prior to each trial of a s...
The present study investigated whether and how self-construal priming influences empathic neural res...
Although it is well documented that cultures influence basic cognitive processes such as attention, ...
The fundamentally social nature of humans is revealed in their exquisitely high sensitivity to poten...
Two experiments showed that American (vs. Chinese) culture priming influences Beijing Chinese underg...
Previous research suggests that individuals from individualistic and collectivistic cultures, due to...
Self-construal priming modulates human behavior and associated neural activity. However, the neural ...
Behavioral studies suggest that self-construals play a key role in modulation of cognitive processin...