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Selected
Publications
Richard E. Nisbett
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Culture of Honor
shows that the U.S. South is more violent than the North. The
greater violence is limited to situations where there has been
an insult or a threat to home or property. Laboratory experiments
show that southerners respond with more anger and greater increases
in testosterone and cortisol levels when insulted than do northerners
and surveys show they feel that violence is an appropriate response
to insult or threat to property. Field experiments show that
southerners are more accepting of other people who have killed
to protect their honor than are northerners. This pattern of
sensitivity to insults and threat is found in cultures throughout
the world and is particularly common where there is a tradition
of earning a living by keeping herds of animals. When this is
the case, the individual risks the possibility of losing all
his wealth by theft. A stance of toughness and unwillingness
to brook any threat or insult is an effective way of making
it clear that it would be unwise to steal from him. The U.S.
South was founded mostly by herding peoples from Scotland and
Ireland and the U.S. North was founded mostly by farming peoples
from England, Holland and Germany. Click the button below to order this book.
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The
Geography of Thought: Why We Think the Way We Do
The
Geography of Thought shows that East Asia and the West
have had different systems of thought, including perception,
assumptions about the nature of the world, and thinking processes,
for thousands of years. Ancient Greek philosophers were "analytic"
objects and people are separated from their environment,
categorized, and reasoned about using logical rules. Psychological
experiments show the same is true of ordinary Westerners today.
Ancient Chinese philosophers and ordinary East Asians today
share a "holistic" orientation perceiving
and thinking about objects in relation to their environments
and reasoning dialectically, trying to find the Middle Way
between opposing propositions. Differences in thought stem
from differences in social practices, with the West being
individualistic and the East collectivistic. Click here to buy it on Amazon.com.
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How
Culture Molds Habits and Thought, Erica
Goode, Aug 8, 2000
NY
Times Article on Reasoning East and West
(Note: you need to register with
NY Times first if you are not a registered member of the
web site. It is free and easy. Just click on "register
now" and follow the directions to set up your free account.)
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Nisbett, R. E. (1990). The anti-creativity letters: Advice from
a senior tempter to a junior tempter. American Psychologist,
45, 1078-1082. PDF of
final manuscript. |
| Nisbett,
R. E. (1998). Race, genetics, and IQ. In C. Jencks and M. Phillips
(Eds.) Black-White Test Score Differences. Washington,
D. C.: Brookings Institution. PDF
of final manuscript. |
| Peng,
K., & Nisbett, R. E. (1999). Culture, dialecticism, and reasoning
about contradiction. American Psychologist, 54, 741-754.
PDF of final manuscript. |
| Choi,
I., Nisbett, R. E., & Norenzayan, A. (1999). Causal attribution
across cultures: Variation and universality. Psychological
Bulletin, 125, 47-63. PDF
of final manuscript. |
| Sanchez-Burks,
J., Nisbett, R. E., & Ybarra, O. (2000). Cultural styles, relationship
schemas, and prejudice against outgroups. Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology, 79, 174-189. PDF
of final manuscript. |
| Ji,
L., Peng, K., & Nisbett, R. E. (2000). Culture, control, and perception
of relationships in the environment. Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology, 78, 943-955. PDF
of final manuscript. |
| Masuda,
T., & Nisbett, R. E. (2001). Attending holistically versus analytically:
Comparing the context sensitivity of Japanese and Americans. Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology 81, 992-934. PDF
of final manuscript. |
Nisbett, R. E., Peng, K., Choi, I., & Norenzayan, A. (2001). Culture
and systems of thought: Holistic vs. analytic cognition. Psychological
Review, 108, 291-310. PDF
of final manuscript. |
Ji, L., Nisbett, R. E., & Su, Y. (2001). Culture, change and prediction.
Psychological Science, 12, 450-456. Follow the directions
off their website to obtain the article from archives. |
| Hedden,
T., Park, D. C., Nisbett, R. E., Ji, L., Jing, Q., & Jiao, S.
(2002). Cultural variation in verbal versus spatial neuropsychological
function across the lifespan. Neuropsychology, 16, 65-73.
PDF of final manuscript. |
| Norenzayan,
A., Choi, I., & Nisbett, R. E. (2002). Cultural similarities and
differences in social inference: Evidence from behavioral predictions
and lay theories of behavior. Personality and Social Psychology
Bulletin, 28, 109-120. PDF
of final manuscript. |
Nisbett, R. E. and Norenzayan, A. (2002). Culture and cognition.
In D. Medin & H. Pashler (Eds.), Stevens' Handbook of Experimental
Psychology, Third Edition, Volume Two: Memory and Cognitive Processes.
New York: John Wiley & Sons. PDF
of final manuscript. |
Norenzayan, A., Smith, E.E., Kim, B. J. & Nisbett, R. E. Cultural
preferences for formal versus intuitive reasoning. (In press).
Cognitive Science. PDF
of final manuscript. |
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