TY - JOUR
T1 - Does Culture Shape Our Understanding of Others’ Thoughts and Emotions? An Investigation Across 12 Countries
AU - Quesque, François
AU - Coutrot, Antoine
AU - Cox, Sharon
AU - de Souza, Leonardo Cruz
AU - Baez, Sandra
AU - Cardona, Juan Felipe
AU - Mulet-Perreault, Hannah
AU - Flanagan, Emma
AU - Neely-Prado, Alejandra
AU - Clarens, Maria Florencia
AU - Cassimiro, Luciana
AU - Musa, Gada
AU - Kemp, Jennifer
AU - Botzung, Anne
AU - Philippi, Nathalie
AU - Cosseddu, Maura
AU - Trujillo-Llano, Catalina
AU - Grisales-Cardenas, Johan Sebastián
AU - Fittipaldi, Sol
AU - Guimet, Nahuel Magrath
AU - Calandri, Ismael Luis
AU - Crivelli, Lucia
AU - Sedeno, Lucas
AU - Garcia, Adolfo M.
AU - Moreno, Fermin
AU - Indakoetxea, Begoña
AU - Benussi, Alberto
AU - Moura, Millena Vieira Brandão
AU - Santamaria-Garcia, Hernando
AU - Matallana, Diana
AU - Pryanishnikova, Galina
AU - Morozova, Anna
AU - Iakovleva, Olga
AU - Veryugina, Nadezda
AU - Levin, Oleg
AU - Zhao, Lina
AU - Liang, Junhua
AU - Duning, Thomas
AU - Lebouvier, Thibaud
AU - Pasquier, Florence
AU - Huepe, David
AU - Barandiaran, Myriam
AU - Johnen, Andreas
AU - Lyashenko, Elena
AU - Allegri, Ricardo F.
AU - Borroni, Barbara
AU - Blanc, Frederic
AU - Wang, Fen
AU - Yassuda, Mônica Sanches
AU - Lillo, Patricia
AU - Teixeira, Antônio Lúcio
AU - Caramelli, Paulo
AU - Hudon, Carol
AU - Slachevsky, Andrea
AU - Ibáñez, Agustin
AU - Hornberger, Michael
AU - Bertoux, Maxime
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank Prof. Stephanie D. Preston and Prof. Skye McDonald. The authors also deeply appreciated the help of Prof. McDonald for English revision. For their administrative or clinical support related to the acquisition of data, the authors would like to thank María Goldfeder, Agostina Galiani (INECO Foundation, Argentina), Ma Eugenia Martin, Cecilia Cervino, Ma Eugenia Tabernero, Micaela Arruabarena, Carlos Martinez Canyazo, Yanina Varela (FLENI Foundation, Argentina), Sophia Reul, Sabine Bruchmann (University Hospital Muenster, Germany), Aurélie Funkiewiez, Bruno Dubois, Elisabeth Ryckaert (Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, France), Gara Tomé, María de Arriba (Hospital Universitario Donostia, Spain), Clélie Philipps, Thimotée Albasser (University of Strasbourg, France), Alicia Wilcox, James Rowe (University of Cambridge, U.K.), Stephen Jeffs (University of East Anglia, U.K.), Ana Carolina Ventura, Andrezza Ferreira dos Santos, Caroline Folli, Emanuel Nery, Gabrielle Oliveira (University of São Paulo, Brazil), and Ângelo Ribeiro Vaz de Faria (Federal University of Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil). The following funding sources have been involved in the study: Administrative Department of Science, Technology and Innovation from Colombia (COLCIENCIAS 1106-744-55314), Takeda Grant (CW2680521), CONICET, FONCYT-PICT (2017-1818, 2017-1820), ANID/FONDAP (15150012), ANID/PIA/ ANILLOS (ACT210096) ANID/FONDECYT (1140423 & 1100975), GBHI ALZ UK-20-639295 and Alzheimer’s Association GBHI ALZ UK-22-865742, ANID/FONDECYT REGULAR (1210176, 1210195, 1220995), Programa Interdisciplinario de Investigacioón Experimental en Comunicación yCognición (PIIECC), Facultad de Humanidades, USACH, NIH NIA R01 AG057234, the Réseau québécois de recherche sur le vieillissement, the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 81100797, 81530036), Beijing high-level health talents training project (No. 2015-3-068), Russian Foundation for Basic Research (No. 20-013-00600), CNPq, Brazil (Ref. 402853/2012-1), Projet Hospitalier de Recherche Clinique (PHRC) inter-régional (IDRCB 2012-A00992-41; HUS No. 5330), Alzheimer’s Research U.K. (ARUK_ PPG2014B-3; ARUK-DT2016-1), Alzheimer’s Society U.K. (AS-SF-14- 003), Deutsche Telekom, São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP—2016/ 07967-2), Multi-Partner Consortium to Expand Dementia Research in Latin America (ReDLat)—funded by the National Institutes of Aging of the National Institutes of Health under award number R01AG057234, an Alzheimer’s Association grant (SG-20-725707-ReDLat), the Rainwater Foundation, and the Global Brain Health Institute. The authors also thank the Laboratory of Excellence Development of Innovative Strategies for a Transdisciplinary Approach to Alzheimer’s Disease (LabEx DISTALZ) as well as the Région Hauts-de-France (Dispositif STaRS), and the Thérèse et René Planiol Foundation. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not represent the official views of the funding agencies.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Psychological Association
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Measures of social cognition have now become central in neuropsychology, being essential for early and differential diagnoses, follow-up, and rehabilitation in a wide range of conditions. With the scientific world becoming increasingly interconnected, international neuropsychological and medical collaborations are burgeoning to tackle the global challenges that are mental health conditions. These initiatives commonly merge data across a diversity of populations and countries, while ignoring their specificity. Objective: In this context, we aimed to estimate the influence of participants’ nationality on social cognition evaluation. This issue is of particular importance as most cognitive tasks are developed in highly specific contexts, not representative of that encountered by the world’s population. Method: Through a large international study across 18 sites, neuropsychologists assessed core aspects of social cognition in 587 participants from 12 countries using traditional and widely used tasks. Results: Age, gender, and education were found to impact measures of mentalizing and emotion recognition. After controlling for these factors, differences between countries accounted for more than 20% of the variance on both measures. Importantly, it was possible to isolate participants’ nationality from potential translation issues, which classically constitute a major limitation. Conclusions: Overall, these findings highlight the need for important methodological shifts to better represent social cognition in both fundamental research and clinical practice, especially within emerging international networks and consortia.
AB - Measures of social cognition have now become central in neuropsychology, being essential for early and differential diagnoses, follow-up, and rehabilitation in a wide range of conditions. With the scientific world becoming increasingly interconnected, international neuropsychological and medical collaborations are burgeoning to tackle the global challenges that are mental health conditions. These initiatives commonly merge data across a diversity of populations and countries, while ignoring their specificity. Objective: In this context, we aimed to estimate the influence of participants’ nationality on social cognition evaluation. This issue is of particular importance as most cognitive tasks are developed in highly specific contexts, not representative of that encountered by the world’s population. Method: Through a large international study across 18 sites, neuropsychologists assessed core aspects of social cognition in 587 participants from 12 countries using traditional and widely used tasks. Results: Age, gender, and education were found to impact measures of mentalizing and emotion recognition. After controlling for these factors, differences between countries accounted for more than 20% of the variance on both measures. Importantly, it was possible to isolate participants’ nationality from potential translation issues, which classically constitute a major limitation. Conclusions: Overall, these findings highlight the need for important methodological shifts to better represent social cognition in both fundamental research and clinical practice, especially within emerging international networks and consortia.
KW - Culture
KW - Emotion recognition
KW - Mentalizing
KW - Social cognition
KW - Theory of mind
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85134746866&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1037/neu0000817
DO - 10.1037/neu0000817
M3 - Article
C2 - 35834208
AN - SCOPUS:85134746866
SN - 0894-4105
VL - 36
SP - 664
EP - 682
JO - Neuropsychology
JF - Neuropsychology
IS - 7
ER -