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By News Staff | August 19th 2008 04:00 AM | 3 comments
Because face recognition is effortlessly achieved by people from all different cultures it was considered to be a basic mechanism universal among humans. However, by using analyses inspired by novel brain imaging technology, researchers at the University of Glasgow have discovered that cultural differences cause us to look at faces differently.

Lead researcher Dr Roberto Caldara said: "In a series of eye-movement studies, we showed that social experience has an impact on how people look at faces. Specifically we noticed a striking difference in eye movements in Westerners and East Asian observers. We found that Westerners tend to look at specific features on an individual's face such as the eyes and mouth whereas East Asian observers tend to focus on the nose or the centre of the face which allows a more general view of all the features. One possible cause of this could be that direct or excessive eye contact may be considered rude in East Asian cultures."

Fixation biases for Western Caucasian (WC - red) and East Asian (EA - blue) observers are highlighted by subtracting WC and the EA Z-scored fixation distribution maps during WC and EA face learning, recognition and categorization by race.

Areas showing a significant fixation bias are delimited by white borders (Zcrit>|4.25|; p<.05); values near 0 indicate similar magnitude in fixation between observers from different cultures.


The results of the study, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council and the Medical Research Council, provide novel insights into why non verbal communication between people from different cultures is sometimes problematic, in an age where globalisation has dramatically increased interdependence, integration and interaction among people and corporations from all over the world. Western societies are generally more individualistic, whereas East Asian societies are collectivistic; Westerners appear to think and perceive focally and Easterners globally.

Dr Caldara continued: "By disproving the long-held assumption that face processing is universally achieved we have highlighted that the external environment, including the society in which we develop, is very influential in basic human mechanisms and caution should be taken when generalising findings to the entire human population."

Citation: Blais C, Jack RE, Scheepers C, Fiset D, Caldara R (2008) Culture Shapes How We Look at Faces. PLoS ONE 3(8): e3022. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0003022

Comments

I know this study was about cognition, but it should be about pink eye. Each person they show clearly has pink eye. And also cold sores.
I wish brain researchers would simply report what they find and not resort to completely asinine explanations like "east asian cultures are X and western cultures are Y". David Brooks just got ripped on language log and elsewhere for such silliness following Nisbett, and I tore into nisbett two years ago for similarly fatuous explanations. http://michaelturton.blogspot.com/2005/ 08/researchers-perpetuate-cultural.html "individualism" and "collectivism" are cultural stereotypes that say more about those who deploy them than the peoples described. In any case Language Log pointed out, other research shows precisely the opposite. Time to drop the cultural explanations, for which there is no causal link supported in the study, and to go back to reporting only what is found. Michael
Hank's picture
I agree that it's a bit of a stretch here but it makes news so it's good to discuss it, even if that means to debunk it.

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