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Presented By: Research Center for Group Dynamics (RCGD)

RCGD Fall Seminar Series: Psychological Diversity across the Globe (Hazel Markus)

Hazel Markus: Cultural Defaults in the Time of Coronavirus: Lessons for the Future

RCGD Fall Seminar Series: Psychological Diversity across the Globe RCGD Fall Seminar Series: Psychological Diversity across the Globe
RCGD Fall Seminar Series: Psychological Diversity across the Globe
Hazel Markus of Stanford University presents "Cultural Defaults in the Time of Coronavirus: Lessons for the Future."

During the COVID-19 pandemic, societies faced the challenge of an unknown and potentially deadly disease. While many questions about the pandemic remain unanswered, it is evident that countries like Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea outperformed the United States in responding to and controlling the outbreak, particularly in its early stages. While many factors are implicated, a comprehensive understanding of this difference requires attention to the variation in common sense and to the meaning systems that ground and organize these contexts. Our goal is both scientific and practical. We identify some common existential questions that emerged during various stages of the pandemic: "Will it happen to us?" "What should I/we do?" and "How should I/we live now,?" and propose that how people answered these questions and made sense of the pandemic reflects the influence of tacit but foundational models of agency and their associated cognitive, affective, and motivational psychological defaults In the United States, where a predominant model of agency emphasizes the independence of the individual, these psychological defaults include optimism-uniqueness; single causes; high arousal; influence and control; personal choice and self-regulation; and promotion. In Japan, Taiwan and South Korea, where a predominant model of agency emphasizes the interdependence of individuals, these psychological defaults include realism-similarity, multiple causes; low arousal; wait and adjust; social choice and social regulation; and prevention. Integrating research from decades of empirical research in social and cultural psychology, we describe how these cultural defaults operated together, influencing commonly observed behavioral patterns and decision making throughout the pandemic. Although much more research is necessary in many unexamined contexts of the world, in the well-researched areas described here, we suggest how to incorporate a consideration of cultural models and psychological defaults into guidelines for decision making and planning for future crises.

Group Dynamics Fall 2023 Seminar Series: Psychological Diversity across the Globe
Do our cultural contexts influence our psychology and behavior — and if so, how? In this RCGD series, we delve into the socio-ecological, histo-cultural, and economic dynamics shaping the diversity of selfhood and its associated cognitive, emotional, and motivational processes. We go beyond the traditional East and West focus to include a wide range of cultural groups. This series will elucidate the implications of psychological diversity across the globe for policies in international relations, politics, economics, business, immigration, and other relevant domains.


Organized by Shinobu Kitayama and Catherine Thomas
As permissions allow, seminars from this series are later posted to ISR's YouTube playlist.


In person: ISR Thompson 1430
The series runs Mondays from 3:30 to 5.


About the Group Dynamics Seminar Series

The Group Dynamics Seminar series is considered one of the longest running seminar series in the social sciences. It has been running uninterruptedly since it was founded by Kurt Lewin in the 1920’s in Berlin. A very important feature of this seminar today is its interdisciplinary nature. Recent seminars have included discussions in “Law and Psychology,” “Racism and Discrimination,” “Social Media,” and “Political Polarization.” The series is offered by the Research Center for Group Dynamics (RCGD), at the Institute for Social Research.
RCGD Fall Seminar Series: Psychological Diversity across the Globe RCGD Fall Seminar Series: Psychological Diversity across the Globe
RCGD Fall Seminar Series: Psychological Diversity across the Globe

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