Publication | Closed Access
Cultural Schemas: What They Are, How to Find Them, and What to Do Once You've Caught One
20
Citations
60
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
EducationCognitionPsycholinguisticsCultural FactorCultural StudiesCultural AnalysisCultural DiversityCultural TraditionsFaulty Theoretical InferencesLanguage StudiesCultural AnalyticsCultural PatternCognitive ScienceMaterial CultureCultural TransmissionCentral Cognitive MechanismCultural SchemasSocial CognitionCultureCultural PracticesCross-cultural AssessmentCultural StructureCross-cultural PerspectiveEthnographyAnthropologySocial AnthropologyCultural AnthropologyCultural BeliefsCultural Psychology
Cultural schemas are a central cognitive mechanism through which culture affects action. In this manuscript, we develop a theoretical model of cultural schemas that is better able to support empirical work, including inferential, sensitizing, and operational uses. We propose a multilevel framework centered on a high-level definition of cultural schemas that is sufficiently broad to capture its major sociological uses but still sufficiently narrow to identify a set of cognitive phenomena with key functional properties in common: cultural schemas are socially shared heuristic representations deployable in automatic cognition. We use this conception to elaborate the main theoretical properties of cultural schemas, and to provide clear criteria that distinguish them from other cultural or cognitive elements. We then propose a series of concrete tests empirical scholarship can use to determine if these properties apply. We also demonstrate how this approach can identify potentially faulty theoretical inferences present in existing work. Then, moving to a lower level of analysis, we elaborate how cultural schemas can be algorithmically conceptualized in terms of their building blocks. This leads us to recommend improvements to methods for measuring cultural schemas. We conclude by proposing fruitful sensitizing questions for future scholarship.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1