Abstract

BackgroundIt is well documented that East Asians differ from Westerners in conscious perception and attention. However, few studies have explored cultural differences in unconscious processes such as implicit learning.Methodology/Principal FindingsThe global-local Navon letters were adopted in the serial reaction time (SRT) task, during which Chinese and British participants were instructed to respond to global or local letters, to investigate whether culture influences what people acquire in implicit sequence learning. Our results showed that from the beginning British expressed a greater local bias in perception than Chinese, confirming a cultural difference in perception. Further, over extended exposure, the Chinese learned the target regularity better than the British when the targets were global, indicating a global advantage for Chinese in implicit learning. Moreover, Chinese participants acquired greater unconscious knowledge of an irrelevant regularity than British participants, indicating that the Chinese were more sensitive to contextual regularities than the British.Conclusions/SignificanceThe results suggest that cultural biases can profoundly influence both what people consciously perceive and unconsciously learn.

Highlights

  • It is well documented that East Asians differ from Westerners in conscious perception and attention [1,2,3,4,5]

  • British participants responded to local target letters faster than to global target letters, t (46) = 2.15, p,.05, d = .62; Chinese participants responded to global target letters nonsignificantly faster than local target letters, t (46) = 2.93, p =

  • Note: G, I, and R or M refer to the trials in which participants gave guess, intuition, and rules or memory attribution, respectively

Read more

Summary

Introduction

It is well documented that East Asians differ from Westerners in conscious perception and attention [1,2,3,4,5]. A number of studies have investigated cultural differences in conscious perception and attention, few studies have explored cultural differences in unconscious processes such as implicit learning. People are faster to respond when the sequence is structured to the training phase rather than when the sequence is switched from the training phase, indicating learning of the sequential structure Such learning occurs even when people deny that there was a sequence, cannot freely report it, or cannot control its generation, indicating the knowledge is (largely) unconscious [17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24]. It is well documented that East Asians differ from Westerners in conscious perception and attention. Few studies have explored cultural differences in unconscious processes such as implicit learning

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call