There is evidence to suggest that people from different cultures have different cognitive processing styles. For example, by measuring the eye movements of American and Chinese students when viewing pictures, Chua, Boland, and Nisbett (2005) found that American students fixated more on the focal object, whereas Chinese students fixated more on the background. In a subsequent object-recognition task, the Chinese students were less likely to correctly recognize old objects presented in new backgrounds than Americans did. This study used a similar scene-viewing task to investigate whether aging modulates these cultural differences in cognitive processing style. Like Chua et al., we found that young Chinese students spent longer fixating the b...
The purpose of this study is to investigate cultural differences in memory for individual objects an...
re affects the way people move their eyes to extract information in their visual world. Adults from ...
Research suggests that people in Eastern interdependent cultures process information more holistical...
There is evidence to suggest that people from different cultures have different cognitive processing...
The present study provided a partial replication of an influential study by Chua, Boland, and Nisbet...
Background: The present study investigates the possibility that culture affects age differences in c...
There are well-documented behavioral differences in the visual processing of objects and backgrounds...
The extent o which cultural stereotypes about aging contribute to age differences in memory perfor-m...
When viewing complex scenes, East Asians attend more to contexts whereas Westerners attend more to o...
BACKGROUND:When viewing complex scenes, East Asians attend more to contexts whereas Westerners atten...
Objectives. Literature on cross-cultural differences in cognition suggests that categorization, as a...
Established culture-invariant measures are needed for cross-cultural assessment of verbal and visuos...
Culture affects the way people move their eyes to extract information in their visual world. Adults ...
In recent years, several cross-cultural studies reported that Westerners focus more on central aspe...
Older adults often remember less negative information than young adults, constituting a positivity e...
The purpose of this study is to investigate cultural differences in memory for individual objects an...
re affects the way people move their eyes to extract information in their visual world. Adults from ...
Research suggests that people in Eastern interdependent cultures process information more holistical...
There is evidence to suggest that people from different cultures have different cognitive processing...
The present study provided a partial replication of an influential study by Chua, Boland, and Nisbet...
Background: The present study investigates the possibility that culture affects age differences in c...
There are well-documented behavioral differences in the visual processing of objects and backgrounds...
The extent o which cultural stereotypes about aging contribute to age differences in memory perfor-m...
When viewing complex scenes, East Asians attend more to contexts whereas Westerners attend more to o...
BACKGROUND:When viewing complex scenes, East Asians attend more to contexts whereas Westerners atten...
Objectives. Literature on cross-cultural differences in cognition suggests that categorization, as a...
Established culture-invariant measures are needed for cross-cultural assessment of verbal and visuos...
Culture affects the way people move their eyes to extract information in their visual world. Adults ...
In recent years, several cross-cultural studies reported that Westerners focus more on central aspe...
Older adults often remember less negative information than young adults, constituting a positivity e...
The purpose of this study is to investigate cultural differences in memory for individual objects an...
re affects the way people move their eyes to extract information in their visual world. Adults from ...
Research suggests that people in Eastern interdependent cultures process information more holistical...