Abstract

Cultural differences are generally explained by how people see themselves in relation to social interaction partners. While Western culture emphasizes independence, East Asian culture emphasizes interdependence. Despite this focus on social interactions, it remains elusive how people from different cultures process feedback on their own (and on others') character traits. Here, participants of either German or Chinese origin engaged in a face-to-face interaction. Consequently, they updated their self- and other-ratings of 80 character traits (e.g., polite, pedantic) after receiving feedback from their interaction partners. To exclude potential confounds, we obtained data from German and Chinese participants in Berlin [functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)] and in Beijing (behavior). We tested cultural influences on social conformity, positivity biases, and self-related neural activity. First, Chinese conformed more to social feedback than Germans (i.e., Chinese updated their trait ratings more). Second, regardless of culture, participants processed self- and other-related feedback in a positively biased way (i.e., they updated more toward desirable than toward undesirable feedback). Third, changes in self-related medial prefrontal cortex activity were greater in Germans than in Chinese during feedback processing. By investigating conformity, positivity biases, and self-related activity in relation to feedback obtained in a real-life interaction, we provide an essential step toward a unifying framework for understanding the diversity of human culture.

Highlights

  • Culture shapes various aspects of human cognition (Nisbett et al, 2001; Nisbett and Masuda, 2003; Henrich et al, 2010; Heine, 2012)

  • CHARACTERISTICS OF PARTICIPANTS Groups did not differ with respect to sex, education, and time living without parents

  • We found a significant correlation with independence [r = 0.36, p = 0.007, 95% confidence interval (CI) (0.10, 0.57); Figure 3D] but not with interdependence [r = −0.06, p > 0.6; the two correlations differed significantly as assessed by Hotelling’s t; t(52) = 2.30; p = 0.02]

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Summary

Introduction

Culture shapes various aspects of human cognition (Nisbett et al, 2001; Nisbett and Masuda, 2003; Henrich et al, 2010; Heine, 2012). How culture influences the processing of social feedback from others has not been investigated—which is surprising given that the relation between self and others defines self-construal. Social feedback processing comprises several components and mechanisms pertinent for social cognition in general. When people receive social feedback they can take it into account to different degrees. That is, they can show various amounts of social conformity to social feedback in general and they can show differential processing of desirable and undesirable social feedback—both of which may differ across cultures. Our study aimed at providing a broad picture of possible cultural influences on social feedback processing and we investigated its behavioral and neural aspects

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