July 20, 2007

Hardwiring culture

"Our inability to understand intuitively the actions and gestures of people from other cultures is hardwired into our brains" is how the Financial Times describes the conclusions reached by researchers from the University of California into the "mirror neuron network" (FT is subscription only, so here's a free access article from Science Daily which covers the same press release), a set of nerve cells that fire not only when we perform an action but also when we watch someone else performing the same action.  Apparently the mirror neuron network responded differently when subjects watched gestures being made by someone from their own culture and someone from a foreign culture.

"Culture has a measurable influence on our brain and as a result on our behaviour", says  Istvan Molnar- Szakacs, a member of the team.

Which comes as something of a relief to those of us who make a living from explaining cultural differences and have to defend ourselves from time to time from people who hate anything that smacks of cultural determinism and say things like "I don't sense any cultural differences.  We are all human beings.  You just need to be sensitive to others and polite" etc.  Not that I disagree with these statements, and sometimes I find myself saying similar things when people get too wound up about etiquette.

In another sense it is bad news for us, because it may also mean that it is very hard to train someone to understand the gestures and feelings of a person from another culture or to use gestures which will be correctly interpreted by someone from another culture.

June 03, 2007

Not separated at birth

Watching "Seven Ages of Rock" on BBC 2 last night, my husband suddenly blurted out "Don Letts, the black Adam Hart Davis" and had me weeping with laughter because it was so true and so insane at the same time.  The similarity of voice in the two of them is part of it too - a kind of barking, enthusiastic, insistency.

I think that's when you know you are in "non-racial" mode, I remember once seeing an elderly Japanese man in the meeting room coffee shop area of a major Japanese construction company and immediately exclaiming to myself "it's Svend!" (my Danish grandfather).  Or meeting a Karen tribe man in Mandalay, Burma, and having an instant flashback to my Scottish, archaeologist ex-boyfriend - same moustache, same Rayban sunglasses, same mannerisms.

Letts_2 Hartdavis
 






Don Letts                                                                        Adam Hart Davis

Enthusiastic populariser of punk and reggae        Enthusiastic populariser of science