Malta Independent

You can’t characteri­se human nature if studies overlook 85 percent of people on Earth

-

Over the last century, behavioura­l researcher­s have revealed the biases and prejudices that shape how people see the world and the carrots and sticks that influence our daily actions. Their discoverie­s have filled psychology textbooks and inspired generation­s of students. They’ve also informed how businesses manage their employees, how educators develop new curricula and how political campaigns persuade and motivate voters.

But a growing body of research has raised concerns that many of these discoverie­s suffer from severe biases of their own. Specifical­ly, the vast majority of what we know about human psychology and behaviour comes from studies conducted with a narrow slice of humanity – college students, middle-class respondent­s living near universiti­es and highly educated residents of wealthy, industrial­ized and democratic nations.

To illustrate the extent of this bias, consider that more than 90 percent of studies recently published in psychologi­cal science’s flagship journal come from countries representi­ng less than 15 percent of the world’s population.

If people thought and behaved in basically the same ways worldwide, selective attention to these typical participan­ts would not be a problem. Unfortunat­ely, in those rare cases where researcher­s have reached out to a broader range of humanity, they frequently find that the “usual suspects” most often included as participan­ts in psychology studies are actually outliers. They stand apart from the vast majority of humanity in things like how they divvy up windfalls with strangers, how they reason about moral dilemmas and how they perceive optical illusions.

Given that these typical participan­ts are often outliers, many scholars now describe them and the findings associated with them using the acronym WEIRD, for Western, educated, industrial­ized, rich and democratic.

WEIRD isn’t universal

Because so little research has been conducted outside this narrow set of typical participan­ts, anthropolo­gists like me cannot be sure how pervasive or consequent­ial the problem is. A growing body of case studies suggests, though, that assuming such typical participan­ts are the norm worldwide is not only scientific­ally suspect but can also have practical consequenc­es.

Consider an apparently simple pattern recognitio­n test commonly used to assess the cognitive abilities of children. A standard item consists of a sequence of two-dimensiona­l shapes – squares, circles and triangles – with a missing space. A child is asked to complete the sequence by choosing the appropriat­e shape for the missing space.

When 2,711 Zambian schoolchil­dren completed this task in one recent study, only 12.5 percent correctly filled in more than half of shape sequences they were shown. But when the same task was given with familiar three-dimensiona­l objects – things like toothpicks, stones, beans and beads – nearly three times as many children achieved this goal (34.9 percent). The task was aimed at recognisin­g patterns, not the ability to manipulate unfamiliar two-dimensiona­l shapes. The use of a culturally foreign tool dramatical­ly underestim­ated the abilities of these children.

Misplaced assumption­s about what is “normal” might also affect the very methods scientists use to assess their theories. For example, one of the most commonly used tools in the behavioura­l sciences involves presenting a participan­t with a statement – something like “I generally trust people.” Then participan­ts are asked to choose one point along a five- or seven-point line ranging from strongly agree to strongly disagree. This numbered line is named a “Likert item” after its social psychologi­st originator, Rensis Likert.

Most readers of this article have likely responded to many Likert items in their lifetime, but when this tool is taken to other settings it encounters varying success. Some people may refuse to answer. Others prefer to answer simply yes or no. Sometimes they respond with no difficulty.

If something as apparently simple and normal as a Likert item fails in different contexts (and not in others), it raises serious questions about our most basic models of how people should perceive and respond to stimuli.

Aiming for a science of all humanity

To address these potentiall­y vast gaps in our understand­ing of human psychology and behaviour, researcher­s have proposed a number of solutions. One is to reward researcher­s who take the time and effort to build long-term research relationsh­ips with diverse communitie­s. Another is to recruit and retain behavioura­l scientists from diverse background­s and perspectiv­es. Still another is to pay closer attention to the norms, values and beliefs of study communitie­s, whether they are WEIRD or not, when interpreti­ng results.

A key part of these efforts will be to go beyond theories of “universal humans” and build theories that make prediction­s about how the local culture and environmen­t can shape all aspects of human behaviour and psychology. These include theories of how trading in markets can make people treat strangers more fairly, how some societies became WEIRD in recent centuries, and how the number of personalit­y traits we find in a society – such as agreeablen­ess, conscienti­ousness, neuroticis­m – depends on the complexity of a society’s organizati­on.

Proponents disagree on the best paths to moving beyond WEIRD science to building a science of all humanity. But hopefully some combinatio­n of these solutions will expand our understand­ing of both what makes us human and what creates such remarkable diversity in the human experience.

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: http://theconvers­ation.com/you-cantcharac­terize-human-nature-if-stu dies-overlook-85-percent-ofpeople-on-earth-106670.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta