TY - JOUR
T1 - Changing cultures, changing brains
T2 - A framework for integrating cultural neuroscience and cultural change research
AU - Kwon, Jung Yul
AU - Wormley, Alexandra S.
AU - Varnum, Michael E.W.
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2021/5
Y1 - 2021/5
N2 - Cultural neuroscience research has provided substantial evidence that culture shapes the brain by providing systematically different sets of experiences. However, cultures are ever-changing in response to the physical and social environment. In the present paper, we integrate theories and methods from cultural neuroscience with the emerging body of research on cultural change and suggest several ways in which the two fields can inform each other. First, we propose that the cultural change perspective helps us reexamine what is meant by culturally typical experiences, which are shaped by the dynamic interaction between cultural norms, values, meanings, and other environmental constraints on behavior. It also allows us to make predictions about the variability/stability of cultural neural differences over time. Then, we discuss how methods used in cultural change research may be applied to cultural neuroscience research and vice versa. We end with a “blue sky vision” for a neuroscience of cultural change.
AB - Cultural neuroscience research has provided substantial evidence that culture shapes the brain by providing systematically different sets of experiences. However, cultures are ever-changing in response to the physical and social environment. In the present paper, we integrate theories and methods from cultural neuroscience with the emerging body of research on cultural change and suggest several ways in which the two fields can inform each other. First, we propose that the cultural change perspective helps us reexamine what is meant by culturally typical experiences, which are shaped by the dynamic interaction between cultural norms, values, meanings, and other environmental constraints on behavior. It also allows us to make predictions about the variability/stability of cultural neural differences over time. Then, we discuss how methods used in cultural change research may be applied to cultural neuroscience research and vice versa. We end with a “blue sky vision” for a neuroscience of cultural change.
KW - Cultural change
KW - Cultural neuroscience
KW - Culture
KW - Ecology
KW - Time series
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U2 - 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2021.108087
DO - 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2021.108087
M3 - Review article
C2 - 33781802
SN - 0301-0511
VL - 162
JO - Biological Psychology
JF - Biological Psychology
M1 - 108087
ER -