Pretty cool.
THIS study goes a long way to reinforce my particular beliefs in how the various, astonishingly different religions around the world were created…
“Environment shapes our brain functions” and in other words our behavior.
I also think it shapes our perceptions and beliefs.
Did you know that our brain function is entirely different when we think about our own honesty versus when we think about another’s honesty? That’s if the “we” is American. For Chinese people their brains look identical when considering either.
These sorts of studies fall into so-called cultural neuroscience; the study how our environment shapes our brain function.
Following up on the cultural differences between Asians and Americans, one study published in Neuroimage, found that when faced with the same image people’s neural responses are totally different. Scientists found that when American subjects viewed a silhouette in a dominant posture (standing up, arms crossed) their brain’s reward circuitry sparked. Not so for Japanese subjects. For the Japanese their reward circuitry fired when they saw a submissive silhouette (head down, arms at sides.) This physiological response matches a well-known behavioral difference: Americans favor and encourage dominant behavior. Japanese culture reinforces submissive culture.
One might think, well, these studies add nothing revolutionary and are simply revealing the wiring behind already well-known behavior. Then again isn’t it a good thing for science to understand the wiring behind a light bulb, instead of just observing that it goes on when someone walks into a room? —Christie Nicholson
What is a commonly held belief here in the US is not a belief that can be held on the other side of the world…
No matter how much some would like.
Thanks to the environment in which we live, one culture thinks differently than another…
Kicker is?
That’s OK.
I think most people forget that last part.

