Across cultures, there are marked differences in visual attention that gradually develop between 4 and 6 years of age. According to the social orientation hypothesis, people in interdependent cultures should show more pronounced context sensitivity than people in independent cultures. However, according to the differential familiarity hypothesis, the focus on the salient object should also depend on the familiarity of the stimulus; people will focus more on the focal object (i.e., less context sensitivity), if it is a less familiar stimulus. To examine the differences in visual attention between interdependent and independent cultures while taking into account stimulus familiarity, this study used an eye-tracking paradigm to assess visual a...
Perception and eye movements are affected by culture. Adults from Eastern societies (e.g. China) dis...
Individual differences in visual attention have been linked to thinking style: analytic thinking (co...
There is evidence that East Asian cultures have more context-sensitive styles of reasoning, memory, ...
Cognitive processes differ markedly between children from different cultures, with best evidence for...
Cognitive processes differ markedly between children from different cultures, with best evidence for...
Cross-cultural differences in Easterners and Westerners have been observed in different cognitive do...
The way humans perceive and attend to visual scenes differs profoundly between individuals. This is ...
The current study aimed to explore cultural differences in the covert spatial distribution of attent...
The way humans perceive and attend to visual scenes differs profoundly between individuals. This is ...
Cross-cultural research has elucidated many important differences between people from Western Europe...
There is evidence to suggest that people from different cultures have different cognitive processing...
When viewing complex scenes, East Asians attend more to contexts whereas Westerners attend more to o...
Previous findings have indicated that, when presented with visual information, North American underg...
The present study provided a partial replication of an influential study by Chua, Boland, and Nisbet...
Recent cross-cultural research suggests that East Asians are more likely than their Western counterp...
Perception and eye movements are affected by culture. Adults from Eastern societies (e.g. China) dis...
Individual differences in visual attention have been linked to thinking style: analytic thinking (co...
There is evidence that East Asian cultures have more context-sensitive styles of reasoning, memory, ...
Cognitive processes differ markedly between children from different cultures, with best evidence for...
Cognitive processes differ markedly between children from different cultures, with best evidence for...
Cross-cultural differences in Easterners and Westerners have been observed in different cognitive do...
The way humans perceive and attend to visual scenes differs profoundly between individuals. This is ...
The current study aimed to explore cultural differences in the covert spatial distribution of attent...
The way humans perceive and attend to visual scenes differs profoundly between individuals. This is ...
Cross-cultural research has elucidated many important differences between people from Western Europe...
There is evidence to suggest that people from different cultures have different cognitive processing...
When viewing complex scenes, East Asians attend more to contexts whereas Westerners attend more to o...
Previous findings have indicated that, when presented with visual information, North American underg...
The present study provided a partial replication of an influential study by Chua, Boland, and Nisbet...
Recent cross-cultural research suggests that East Asians are more likely than their Western counterp...
Perception and eye movements are affected by culture. Adults from Eastern societies (e.g. China) dis...
Individual differences in visual attention have been linked to thinking style: analytic thinking (co...
There is evidence that East Asian cultures have more context-sensitive styles of reasoning, memory, ...