• In 1992, 64% of the world’s psychology researchers were American
  • Psychology is male dominated
  • Psychology is culturally biased - typically the study of White Americans

Universality and Bias

  • Many psychologists claim to have discovered ‘facts’ about human behaviour that apply to every human everywhere
  • However, their studies are often restricted to one particular group of people they were studying
  • Critics argue that mainstream psychology has ignored culture as an important influence on human behaviour

Cultural Bias

  • If psychologists judge what they perceive to be ‘normal’ behaviour based on only what is the norm in their own culture, then this is cultural bias
  • This is because behaviours that do not follow their cultural norms will then be labelled as ‘abnormal’ or ‘inferior’, which is not an objective label

Ethnocentrism

  • A form of cultural bias
  • It is the usage of ones own cultural group as a basis for judgements about other groups as we see our own culture as superior to other cultures
  • In psychological research this may be evident through a view that any behaviours which do not conform to the (usually Western) model are inferior, unsophisticated or underdeveloped

Example

  • Ainsworth’s Strange Situation (1970) is an example of this as it only reflects norms and values of American culture
    • E.g., ideal/secure attachment - infant showing moderate distress when mother leaves
  • However, this inappropriately labels mothers in other cultures because their children do not follow this American cultural norm for ‘secure’ attachment
    • E.g., German mothers were seen as cold and rejecting because they encouraged the independence of their children

Imposed Etic

  • Ainsworth’s research is an example of imposed etic
  • This is when a psychologist imposes their own cultural understanding upon other people from different cultures
  • Berry argues that psychology is guilty of imposed etic
  • This means psychologists take the findings of research conducted on their own culture and then attempt to use it to make universal theories for all cultures
  • However, the things they discover only make sense from the perspective of the culture in which the study took place