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BEIJING, Aug. 23 -- American students spent longer
looking at the tiger, while the Chinese students' eyes tended to dart around,
taking in the context.
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| American students spent longer looking at
the tiger, while the Chinese students' eyes tended to dart around, taking
in the context.£¨Photo: qingdaonews£© |
Chinese and American people see the world differently
¨C literally. While Americans focus on the central objects of photographs,
Chinese individuals pay more attention to the image as a whole, according to
psychologists at the University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor, US.
"There is plenty of anecdotal evidence suggesting
that Western and East Asian people have contrasting world-views," explains
Richard Nisbett, who carried out the study. "Americans break things down
analytically, focusing on putting objects into categories and working out what
rules they should obey," he says.
By contrast, East Asians have a more holistic
philosophy, looking at objects in relation to the whole. "Figuratively,
Americans see things in black and white, while East Asians see more shades of
grey," says Nisbett. "We wanted to devise an experiment to see if that
translated to a literal difference in what they actually see."
The researchers tracked the eye-movements of two
groups of students while they looked at photographs. One group contained
American-born graduates of European descent and the other was comprised of
Chinese-born graduate students who came to the US after their undergraduate
degrees.
Each picture showed a striking central image placed
in a realistic background, such as a tiger in a jungle. They found that the
American students spent longer looking at the central object, while the Chinese
students' eyes tended to dart around, taking in the context.
Harmony versus goals
Nisbett and his colleagues believe that this
distinctive pattern has developed because of the philosophies of these two
cultures. "Harmony is a central idea in East Asian philosophy, and so there is
more emphasis on how things relate to the whole," says Nisbett. "In the West, by
contrast, life is about achieving goals."
Psychologists watching American and Japanese families
playing with toys have also noted this difference. "An American mother will say:
¡®Look Billy, a truck. It's shiny and has wheels.' The focus is on the object,"
explains Nisbett. By contrast, Japanese mothers stress context saying things
like, "I push the truck to you and you push it to me. When you throw it at the
wall, the wall says ¡®ouch'."
Nisbett also cites language development in the
cultures. "To Westerners it seems obvious that babies learn nouns morys. But
while this is the case in the West, studies show that Korean and Chinese
children pick up verbs ¨C which relate objects to each other - more easily.
"Nisbett's work is interesting and suggestive," says
John Findlay, a psychologist specialising in human visual attention at Durham
University, UK. "It's always difficult to put an objective measure on cultural
differences, but this group have made a step towards that."
Nisbett hopes that his work will change the way the
cultures view each other. "Understanding that there is a real difference in the
way people think should form the basis of respect."
(Source: CRIENGLISH.com/New Scientist)
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