How Does Your Culture Influence The People You trust
How
can culture influence giving? Some scholars have argued that people are
more likely to share with others who are similar in terms of race or
sex, but the evidence for this is mixed.
A new study by Stanford psychologists, which appeared recently in Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, suggests, however, that similar emotional expressions can motivate giving, and can do so even more than a common race or sex.
Since
culture drives people’s tendency to value similar emotions in others—a
phenomenon dubbed “ideal affect match”—the research clarifies a new way
that culture can influence giving and potentially provide insights about
organizations’ philanthropic efforts.
Cultural differences in ideal affect
Previous
research from Jeanne Tsai, an associate professor of psychology at
Stanford, has examined the relationship between culture and emotion with
a focus on European Americans and East Asians.
This
research suggested that while European Americans typically want to feel
states of excitement (high-arousal positive states), Asians instead
prefer to feel states of calmness (low-arousal positive states). Thus,
people tended to like others who showed the emotional states that they
themselves wished to feel—“ideal affect match.”
That
led Tsai, along with co-authors BoKyung Park, Elizabeth Blevins,
and Brian Knutson, to wonder whether ideal affect match could influence
not only liking, but also willingness to allocate actual money to a
stranger.
When will a dictator give?
In
the first study, the researchers examined groups of European American
and Korean college students. After measuring their actual affect (how
people feel) and ideal affect (how they want to feel), the researchers
had participants play a series of Dictator Games—a game in which one
person (the “dictator”) decides whether to distribute their money to
other players (potential recipients).
While
participants were always assigned to play the dictator, different
potential recipients were depicted with computer-generated avatars that
varied in terms of their emotional expression, race, and sex.
Afterwards, participants rated how much they trusted each of the
potential recipients they had encountered.
The
researchers found that while European Americans gave more to the
recipients whose expressions conveyed excitement (i.e., open, toothy
smiles), Korean students gave more to recipients whose expressions
conveyed calm (i.e., closed smiles). Further, European Americans rated
excited recipients as more trustworthy, but Koreans rated calm
recipients as more trustworthy.
However, common race and sex had little effect on sharing or inferred trust.
“These
findings suggest that emotional expression—and whether or not it
matches people’s ideal affect—may play a more powerful role in resource
sharing than even race or sex,” said Tsai, director of
Stanford’s Culture and Emotion Lab.
Scanning for answers
So
what about ideal affect match could motivate people to share with
others? Was it the way that a matching stranger made them feel or the
belief that they shared values? To find out, the researchers ran a
second study in which European Americans and Koreans played repeated
Dictator Games—this time, while undergoing functional magnetic resonance
imaging (fMRI). Afterwards, participants again rated potential
recipients’ trustworthiness and other characteristics, including
friendliness and intelligence.
When
they saw faces whose expressions matched their ideal affect, the scans
revealed decreased activity in the brain’s right temporo-parietal
junction, which is associated with perceiving that others hold different
beliefs, according to Tsai. One interpretation of this decreased
activity is that participants assumed the recipients shared their
values. This interpretation aligns with the fact that participants
tended to trust and share more with recipients whose ideal affect
matched their own.
Tsai
said that, traditionally, it has been difficult for researchers to
identify which emotional expressions generate trust. This may be because
they vary by culture. These findings help explain why people from
different cultures might trust people with different emotional
expressions.
“Together,
these data suggest that part of the power of ideal affect match is that
it sends an implicit signal that someone else shares our beliefs and
values, which in turn makes them more trustworthy, and promotes giving,”
Tsai said.
Enhancing sharing across cultures
The
study challenges established research notions about in-group identity,
or the cues that people use to identify themselves as belonging to a
group. The findings specifically suggest that malleable cues related to
mutual emotional values can overpower more static cues like sex and
race.
The
results imply that when dealing with other cultures, people may
overcome traditional categories by understanding and expressing shared
emotional values. Since emotional expressions are easier to modify, the
findings suggest more flexible ways of enhancing trust and sharing
across cultures.
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