A review found that 68% of research participants came from the UnitedStates, and 96% from industrialisednations (Henrich et al. 2010).
Another review found that 80% of research participants were undergraduates studying psychology (Arnett 2008).
WEIRD people set standard
What we know about human behaviour has a strong culturalbias.Henrich et al. coined the term WEIRD to describe the group of people most likely to be studied by psychologists - Westernised, Educatedpeople from Industrialised, RichDemocracies.
If the norm or standard for a particular behaviour is set by
WEIRD people, then the behaviour of people from non-Western, less educated, agricultural and poorer cultures are inevitably seen as 'abnormal', 'inferior' or 'unusual'.
Ethnocentrism
A form of cultural bias.
In psychological research this may be communicated through a view that any behaviour that does notconform to a European/Americanstandard is somehow deficient or underdeveloped.
Example of ethnocentrism
Ainsworth and Bell's (1970) research on attachmenttype reflected the norms of US culture. They suggested that ideal (secure) attachment was defined as a baby showing moderatedistress when left alone by the mother figure.
This has led to misinterpretation of child-rearing practices in other countries which deviated from the USnorm, e.g. Japanese babies rarely left on own, more likely to be classed as insecurelyattached as they showed distress on separation
Cultural relativism helps to avoid cultural bias
The 'facts' that psychologists discover may only make sense from the perspective of the culture within which they were discovered. Being able to recognise this is one way of avoidingculturalbias in research.
universality versus cultural relativism
Berry (1969) argues that:
An etic approach looks at behaviour from outside a given culture and identifies behaviours that are universal.
An emic approach functions from inside a culture and identifies behaviours that are specific to that culture.
Ainsworth and Bell's research illustrates an imposedetic - they studied behaviours inside a singleculture (America) and then assumed their ideal attachmenttype could be applied universally.
Evaluation
One limitation is many classic studies are culturallybiased. Both Asch's and Milgram's original studies were conducted with whitemiddle-classUS participants. Replications of these studies in different countries produced rather differentresults.Asch-type experiments in collectivist cultures found significantly higher rates of conformity than the original studies in the
US, an individualist culture. This suggests our understanding of topics such as socialinfluence should only be applied to individualist cultures.
Evaluation
One strength is the emergence of culturalpsychology. Cultural psychology is the study of how people shape and are shaped by their culturalexperience. It is an emerging field that takes an emic approach. Research is conducted from inside a culture, often alongside local
researchers using culturally-based
techniques. Fewer cultures are considered when comparing differences. This suggests that modern psychologists are mindful of the dangers of cultural bias and are taking steps to avoid it.
Evaluation
One limitation is ethnicstereotyping.Gould (1981) explained how the first intelligence tests led to eugenic social policies in America. During WWI psychologists gave IQ tests to 1.75 million army recruits. Many test items were
ethnocentric (e.g. name US presidents) so recruits from southeastern Europe and African-Americans scored lowest and were deemed geneticallyinferior. This illustrates how cultural bias can be used to justify prejudice and discrimination towards ethnic and cultural groups.