technical paper
LIVE - Analysing ‘Mind-minded’ Language Patterns Relating to Mental State Discussion Norms and Social Cognition in Three Cultures
Abstract:
Mental state focus is not restricted to overt inferences about other’s thoughts and beliefs; it can also emerge subtly in how mental state language is used to talk about others. In Western societies, this ‘Mind-mindedness’ correlates with social cognitive abilities to infer what others think and know (mentalizing). However, open discussion of others’ mental states is normatively discouraged in “Opacity of Mind” cultures, leading to questions about whether mentalizing operates differently with these normative limitations on mind-minded language. This study examines patterns of mental state word use as an indication of ‘mind-mindedness’ across three cultural groups with distinct norms around mental state inference: Indigenous iTaukei Fijians (N=121) who hold ‘Opacity of Mind’ norms; New Zealanders of European Descent (N=355) who hold ‘mind-focused’ norms; and Pacific Islanders living in NZ (N=616) who have mixed exposure to both norm systems. Results show distinct preferences for mind-minded language across various social communication domains that align with the cultural group’s social norms around mental state discussion. These patterns further correspond to societal patterns of responses to mentalizing tasks. Implications for cultures’ impact on cognition and co-evolution of cognition and culture through language are discussed.
Speaker's social media:
Twitter: @GuessRita