Abstract

Results from two groups of biculturals (Hong Kong undergraduates, Chinese Americans) and a group of European Americans in two studies showed that in the presence of applicable cues of a culture, individuals with expert knowledge in the culture spontaneously make inferences about the culture's moral values, producing a Stroop-like effect. Although both biculturals and European Americans made spontaneous cultural inferences from American cultural cues, only biculturals made spontaneous inferences from Chinese cultural cues. Moreover, American-Chinese bicultural individuals can switch between correspondent cultural inferences from American and Chinese cultural cues numerous times within one experimental session. Implications on cultural adaptation and cultural competence are discussed.

Authors
Jeanne Ho-Ying Fu, Chi-Yue Chiu, Michael Morris, and M.J. Young
Format
Journal Article
Publication Date
Journal
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology

Full Citation

Fu, Jeanne Ho-Ying, Chi-Yue Chiu, Michael Morris, and M.J. Young
. “Spontaneous inferences from cultural cues: Varying responses of cultural insiders and outsiders.”
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
vol.
38
, (January 01, 2007):
58
-
75
.