Article

The context-sensitivity of visual size perception varies across cultures

Details

Citation

Doherty M, Tsuji H & Phillips W (2008) The context-sensitivity of visual size perception varies across cultures. Perception, 37 (9), pp. 1426-1433. https://doi.org/10.1068/p5946

Abstract
There is evidence that East Asian cultures have more context-sensitive styles of reasoning, memory, attention, and scene perception than western cultures. Lower levels of the perceptual hierarchy seem likely to be similar in all cultures, however, so we compared context-sensitivity in Japan with that in the UK using a rigorous psychophysical measure of the effects of centre-surround contrast on size discrimination. In both cultures context-sensitivity was greater for females working in the social sciences than for males working in the mathematical sciences. More surprisingly, context-sensitivity was also much greater in Japan than in the UK. These findings show that, even at low levels of the visual processing hierarchy, context-sensitivity varies across cultures, and they raise important issues for both vision scientists and cross-cultural psychologists.

Keywords
Cultural differences; Attention; Visual perception; Cognitive syles; Cross-cultural studies

Journal
Perception: Volume 37, Issue 9

StatusPublished
Publication date30/09/2008
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/371
PublisherPion Ltd
ISSN0301-0066

People (1)

Professor Bill Phillips

Professor Bill Phillips

Emeritus Professor, Psychology