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Original Articles

Culture in social neuroscience: A review

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Pages 3-10 | Received 21 Feb 2012, Accepted 24 Apr 2012, Published online: 06 Jun 2012
 

Abstract

The aim of this review is to highlight an emerging field: the neuroscience of culture. This new field links cross-cultural psychology with cognitive neuroscience across fundamental domains of cognitive and social psychology. We present a summary of studies on emotion, perspective-taking, memory, object perception, attention, language, and the self, showing cultural differences in behavior as well as in neural activation. Although it is still nascent, the broad impact of merging the study of culture with cognitive neuroscience holds mutual distributed benefits for multiple related fields. Thus, cultural neuroscience may be uniquely poised to provide insights and breakthroughs for longstanding questions and problems in the study of behavior and thought, and its capacity for integration across multiple levels of analysis is especially high. These findings attest to the plasticity of the brain and its adaptation to cultural contexts.

Keywords:

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Brittany Bannon, Maryanne Wolf, and Reginald Adams for their insights. This work was supported in part by grants NIH R01 MH070833-01A1 to NA and NSERC 419593 to NOR.

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