Concept information
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Preferred term
cultural effects on visual perception
Definition
- Mainstream psychology has generally assumed that psychological processes are universal and that the main role of psychology is to investigate these universal aspects of human beings. Visual perception, attention, and even visual illusion have, therefore, been understood mainly through the underlying optical mechanisms and characteristics of visual information hardwired in the human brain and shared by human beings in general.During the last couple of decades, however, increasing numbers of cross-cultural studies have empirically reexamined this theoretical assumption and advocated an alternative view of human psychology in which culture and human psychological processes are considered to mutually influence one another. [Source: Encyclopedia of Perception; Cultural Effects on Visual Perception]
Broader concept
Belongs to group
URI
http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/N9J-ZTQP93Z6-3
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