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Psychological and cognitive anthropology

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Title: Psychological and cognitive anthropology


1
Psychological and cognitive anthropology
  • Studies of emotional development
  • Cognitive development
  • Cultural factors in variation of psychological
    factors
  • The cross-cultural study of mental illness

2
Piagets studies
  • Sensorimotor 0-2 years. Nonverbal learning
    through personal exploration and experience with
    concrete objects
  • Preoperational 2-7 years. Children acquire
    vocabulary and tag objects with words
  • Concrete operational 7-12 years. Children
    classify objects by similarities and differences
    in qualities. They learn to use multiple
    dimensions simultaneously in making
    classifications. These include length, number,
    weight, area, volume

3
  • Formal operational (scientific) 12-adult. Formal
    logic, use of syllogisms, deductive reasoning.
    hare tortoise as fast slow
  • During the concrete operational stage, children
    acquire concepts like conservation and
    reversibility, while during the formal
    operational stage, the ability to think in
    hypothetical terms is developed.
  • Are these stages universal?

4
Primitive means technology
  • Most work has been on the shift from operational
    to abstract reasoning stage
  • Are preindustrial people preoperational? Consider
    the two-week hunting treks of the Yanomamo the
    trans-Pacific canoe trips of the people of Yap
    the eight-section kinships system of Australian
    peoples the distribution of meat among the
    !Kung and so on.

5
No culture-free tests
  • The problem may be the supposedly culture- free
    tests and schooling as training for certain kinds
    of tests
  • Marc Irwin studied rice farmers in Liberia and
    compared them to U.S. undergraduates.
  • Used rice bowls and geometric cards for the two
    groups. Abstract thinking was at the same level
    in both groups.

6
The instrument effect
  • The Porteus Maze and Australian aborigines
    (1917). There are hundreds of studies of
    Aborigine cognition.
  • The false debate over culture vs. nature in
    explaining the results.
  • The instrument effect beakers and triangles are
    not part of everyone's experience.

7
The conservation principle
  • Douglas Price-Williams used familiar materials
    and found no differences in the concrete
    operational stage between Tiv children in West
    Africa and European children, in terms of
    conservation of earth, nuts, number.

8
Literacy and cognition
  • Literacy is literacy a factor in cognition.
  • But Vai and Cree readers, who have their own
    scripts, were more affected by schooling than by
    literacy on cognitive tests.

9
Field independence
  • People who rely on hunting develop field
    independence.
  • Embedded Figures Test
  • Two examples Mexico and Greece

10
Child-rearing practices
  • Breast feeding
  • In 70 of societies, children are weaned after
    two years. Children may be fed 20-40 times per
    day. Almost all American women stop by 10 months.
  • Holding and touching
  • In H/G societies, children are held up to 50 of
    the day.
  • In both the U.S. and Japan, children are touched
    from 12-20 of the time that they are awake.
  • In the U.S., babies are usually held than 10 of
    the day and spend a lot of time alone in cribs.

11
The Logoli of Kenya
  • Lee and Ruth Munroe found
  • infants held more by their mothers become more
    trusting by age 5.
  • the number of different holders adds more to
    trust in toddlers than time held by mothers.

12
Response to crying
  • ite pinai, ite ponai in traditional Greek if a
    child is crying, its either hurting or hungry.
  • In many societies, like the Efe (of Congo) a
    3-month old gets a response within 10 sec of
    crying, 75 of the time
  • In U.S., we ignore crying 45 of the time
  • Infant mortality 1 in industrialized societies
    vs. up to 35 in nonindustri-alized societies.

13
Collective vs. individualistic values
  • Agricultural and herding societies stress
    obedience.
  • Hunting and gathering societies stress
    self-reliance and individuality.
  • We are foragers in the U.S.
  • The correlation is inexact and the mechanism of
    cause remains a subject of wide interest and
    study.

14
Culturally specific mental illnesses
  • Windigo psychosis among Ojibwa, Cree
  • men of these societies are said to be possessed
    by cannibal giant wiitiko.
  • Pibloktoq
  • Eskimo adults of Greenland. Women strip naked and
    wander across ice until they collapse.
  • Amok
  • Malaya, Indonesia, New Guinea. Depression,
    followed by brooding and withdrawal, and then a
    wild, berserk frenzy of destruction.
  • Are these illnesses patterned? Are they
    expressions of the same mental illnesses?

15
Marano's explanation of windigo psychosis
  • Under conditions of stress, the Ojibwa and Cree
    triaged their population and increased the chance
    for survival of all.
  • There is never documentation of the behavior of
    the accused.
  • But all accused were sickly, senile, non-Ojibwa.
  • Emic vs. etic explanations The etic requires
    positing a universal fear stimulated by specific
    conditions.
  • The fear of being eaten was concocted as a way to
    overcome the fear of killing.

16
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17
Edgertons study mental illness in Africa
  • Sebei of Uganda, Pokot of NW Kenya, Kamba of SC
    Kenya, Hehe of Tanzania
  • Kichwaa Swahili for severe mental illness.

18
Free list of traits of kichwaa
  • Goes naked
  • Sleeps or hides in the bush
  • Shaves head and bites self
  • Eats and smears dirt and/or feces
  • Runs wildly
  • Destroys property
  • Wanders aimlessly

19
Five key traits
  • Five traits accounted for about 60 of all traits
    listed.
  • The Africans in these four societies, said
    Edgerton, do not regard a single behavior as
    psychotic which could not be so regarded in the
    West.
  • Schizophrenia is biochemically based, but it is
    expressed differently across cultures.

20
Hallucinations
  • Hallucinations were almost never listed (lt1) by
    Edgertons informants.
  • Hallucinations about being controlled by robots
    emerged after a 1921 play by Karel Capek.
  • Schizophrenics only began hallucinating about
    being controlled by electric rays at the
    beginning of the 20th century.
  • Schizophrenics in the U.S. tend to have visual,
    while schizophrenics in India tend to have more
    olfactory hallucinations.

21
Rosenhans study of labeling
  • 3 female and 5 male pseudopatients
  • 7 of 8 admitted to a total of 12 hospitals. One
    was diagnosed as manic depressive. All others
    diagnosed as schizophrenic.
  • Released between 7-52 days later with diagnosis
    schizophrenia in remission or asymptomatic or
    improved.
  • note-taking and oral-acquisitive behavior
  • One patient saw through it and accused the
    researcher of being a journalist.
  • None of the staff saw through it.

22
Spitzers critique
  • Was it ethical to dupe the hospital workers?
  • If people come to an emergency room with intense
    stomach pains, wouldnt they be diagnosed as
    suffering from gastritis?
  • Eventually, the same duped psychiatrists
    diagnosed that rarest of events, "schizophrenia
    in remission" (Spitzer 1976461).

23
Science is a human activity
  • Still, this research reminds us that medicine,
    like any human endeavor, is populated by humans,
    who are fully equipped with egos and with
    ambitions.
  • Without these qualities, we would have no modern
    medicine, no miracle cures, no computer-driven
    prostheses.
  • But with these qualities, we know that we have to
    be vigilant against the potential arrogance that
    comes from success.
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