cultural variations

    Cards (11)

    • what is meant by cultural variation?
      differences in norms and values that exist between people in different cultural groups
    • what was van izjendoorn's study intending to look at?
      the proportions of secure, insecure avoidant and insecure resistant attachments of a range of countries to assess cultural variation
    • explain how van izjendoorn studied cultural variation in attachment
      located 32 studies of attachment where the strange situation had been used and meta-analysed the data from them
      - across 8 different countries
    • explain the findings of van Ijzendoorn's study
      - secure was the most common across all cultures
      - individualist cultures: rates of insecure-resistant were similar to Ainsworth (below 14%)
      - collectivist cultures (Japan, Isreal): insecure-resistant rates were above 25% + insecure-avoidant was reduced
      - there was more variation between studies within countries than between countries
    • what were the conclusions from van Ijzendoorn's study?
      secure attachment style is the norm in a wide range of cultures --> supports Bowlby's idea that attachment is innate
      HOWEVER cultural variations have influence on attachment types
    • what is meant by individualist culture?
      a culture that values the individual more than the group
    • what is meant by collectivist culture?
      culture that focuses on communal relationships with others such as family, friends, and community
    • which country showed the highest rates of insecure avoidant?
      germany
    • which country showed the highest rates of insecure resistant?
      Japan and Isreal
    • name one strength of research into cultural variations
      INDIGENOUS RESEARCHERS:
      < psychologists were from the same cultural background as participants which means that any potential problems in cross-cultural research can be avoided, eg. language barrier
      = enhances validity
    • name one limitation of research into cultural variations
      CONFOUNDING VARIABLES:
      < studies conducted in different countries aren't matched for methodology when they're compared with reviews or meta-analysed
      < examples of confounding variables: social class, environment, room size, availability of interesting toys
      = this means that looking at attachment behaviour in different non-matched studies conducted in different countries may not tell us anything about cross cultural patterns of attachment
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