Tversky's (1977) diagnosticity principle implies that categorization affects similarity, and that similarity in turn is based on context. However, Nisbett, Peng, Choi, and Norenzayan (2001) suggest that Chinese and Westerners differ in their sensitivity to context and categorization. Because of these differences, it is not clear whether Chinese should follow the diagnosticity principle. To explore these possibilities, we conducted a cross-cultural experiment using participants from Australia and China to repeat the experiment of Tversky (1977) using schematic faces as stimuli. Results showed that Australians, but not Chinese, made similarity judgments in a manner compatible with the diagnosticity principle. We suggest that: 1) the use of th...
Face processing and emotion recognition are often focal points in psychological research, but seldom...
Studies have shown that while East Asians focused on the center of the face to recognize identities,...
Cross-cultural studies have identified a distinct holistic-analytic pattern that observers employ in...
Tversky’s (1977) diagnosticity principle implies that categorization affects similarity, and t...
Social judgments of faces made by Western participants are thought to be underpinned by two dimensio...
Cross-cultural differences in Easterners and Westerners have been observed in different cognitive do...
It is well established that East Asians (Easterners) are poorer at categorizing some emotional facia...
Perception and eye movements are affected by culture. Adults from Eastern societies (e.g. China) dis...
East Asian cognition has been held to be relatively holistic; that is, attention is paid to the fiel...
Previous research has shown strong cross-cultural agreement in facial attractiveness judgments. Howe...
Adults from Eastern (e.g., China) and Western (e.g., USA) cultural groups display pronounced differe...
Cultural differences are generally explained by how people see themselves in relation to social inte...
Are there really cross-cultural differences in how participants respond to questionnaires regardless...
The ability to recognize facial expressions of basic emotions is often considered a universal human ...
The cross-cultural generalizability of Chinese personality dimensions—in particular, the Interperson...
Face processing and emotion recognition are often focal points in psychological research, but seldom...
Studies have shown that while East Asians focused on the center of the face to recognize identities,...
Cross-cultural studies have identified a distinct holistic-analytic pattern that observers employ in...
Tversky’s (1977) diagnosticity principle implies that categorization affects similarity, and t...
Social judgments of faces made by Western participants are thought to be underpinned by two dimensio...
Cross-cultural differences in Easterners and Westerners have been observed in different cognitive do...
It is well established that East Asians (Easterners) are poorer at categorizing some emotional facia...
Perception and eye movements are affected by culture. Adults from Eastern societies (e.g. China) dis...
East Asian cognition has been held to be relatively holistic; that is, attention is paid to the fiel...
Previous research has shown strong cross-cultural agreement in facial attractiveness judgments. Howe...
Adults from Eastern (e.g., China) and Western (e.g., USA) cultural groups display pronounced differe...
Cultural differences are generally explained by how people see themselves in relation to social inte...
Are there really cross-cultural differences in how participants respond to questionnaires regardless...
The ability to recognize facial expressions of basic emotions is often considered a universal human ...
The cross-cultural generalizability of Chinese personality dimensions—in particular, the Interperson...
Face processing and emotion recognition are often focal points in psychological research, but seldom...
Studies have shown that while East Asians focused on the center of the face to recognize identities,...
Cross-cultural studies have identified a distinct holistic-analytic pattern that observers employ in...