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The majority of cognitive bias research has been conducted in Western cultures. We examined cross-cultural differences in cognitive biases, comparing Westerners' and East Asians' performance and acculturation following migration to the opposite culture. Two local (UK, Hong Kong) and four migrant (short-term and long-term migrants to each culture) samples completed culturally validated tasks measuring attentional and interpretation bias. Hong Kong residents were more positively biased than people living in the UK on several measures, consistent with the lower prevalence of psychological disorders in East Asia. Migrants to the UK had reduced positive biases on some tasks, while migrants to Hong Kong were more positive, compared to their respective home counterparts, consistent with acculturation in attention and interpretation biases. These data illustrate the importance of cultural validation of findings and, if replicated, would have implications for the mental health and well-being of migrants.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0223358

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2019-01-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

14

Keywords

Acculturation, Adult, Attention, Bias, Cognition, Culture, Emigration and Immigration, Emotions, Asia, Eastern, Female, Hong Kong, Humans, Male, Stroop Test, Task Performance and Analysis, United Kingdom, Young Adult