4.5 Article

Culture and the Body: East-West Differences in Visceral Perception

Journal

JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 102, Issue 4, Pages 718-728

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0027010

Keywords

culture; physiology; visceral perception; context

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This research investigated cross-cultural differences in the accuracy of individuals' perceptions of internal visceral states. We conducted 4 studies to test the hypothesis that Asians are less sensitive to internal physiological cues relative to European Americans. Studies 1 and 2 assessed cultural differences in visceral perception via tests of misattributions of arousal: Study 1 involved false heart rate feedback during an emotionally evocative slideshow and examined subsequent self-reported affective changes; Study 2 manipulated apparent physiological arousal and measured its effects on attraction via an immersive virtual environment. Study 3 directly assessed visceral perception using a heartbeat detection task. All 3 studies found Asians to be less viscerally perceptive than European Americans. Study 4 examined one possible cultural mechanism for the observed difference and found evidence for contextual dependency as a mediator of the culture visceral perception link.

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