Effects of cultural ideologies and culture mixing flow on attitudes toward culture mixing

The impact of globalisation consists of many positive and negative consequences. One major negative consequence involves negative attitudes towards foreigners entering one’s country and changing aspects of the home culture. Research has indicated that this was possibly due to the perceived cultural...

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Main Author: Koh, Wayne Jyh Chee
Other Authors: Bobby K. Cheon
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139441
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1394412020-05-19T08:22:02Z Effects of cultural ideologies and culture mixing flow on attitudes toward culture mixing Koh, Wayne Jyh Chee Bobby K. Cheon School of Social Sciences bkcheon@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology::Behaviorism Social sciences::Psychology::Motivation The impact of globalisation consists of many positive and negative consequences. One major negative consequence involves negative attitudes towards foreigners entering one’s country and changing aspects of the home culture. Research has indicated that this was possibly due to the perceived cultural contamination experienced when encountering such instances, and past research has advocated for polyculturalism and cited its crucial benefits in reducing intergroup conflict. In addition to this, the direction of influence of culture mixing have shown to impact this perceived cultural contamination where people are more positive towards heritage outflow situations, where one’s heritage culture is represented elsewhere and is influencing another culture. This study examined the relationship between two Cultural Ideologies (i.e., Polyculturalism and Multiculturalism) and Culture Mixing Flow (i.e., Heritage Outflow and Foreign Inflow) on people’s attitudes towards culture mixing. Potential moderators were also tested to provide more depth into this relationship. Participants were primed with either one of the two cultural ideologies or a control prime, before proceeding with responding to a business case involving either a heritage outflow situation or a foreign inflow situation. Results indicate that the benefits of polyculturalism was absent in this Singaporean sample. Additionally, the culture mixing flow had a significant impact on people’s attitudes towards culture mixing where people generally had more positive attitudes towards heritage outflow culture mixing than foreign inflow ones, this effect was moderated by prior travel experience. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2020-05-19T08:22:02Z 2020-05-19T08:22:02Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139441 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology::Behaviorism
Social sciences::Psychology::Motivation
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology::Behaviorism
Social sciences::Psychology::Motivation
Koh, Wayne Jyh Chee
Effects of cultural ideologies and culture mixing flow on attitudes toward culture mixing
description The impact of globalisation consists of many positive and negative consequences. One major negative consequence involves negative attitudes towards foreigners entering one’s country and changing aspects of the home culture. Research has indicated that this was possibly due to the perceived cultural contamination experienced when encountering such instances, and past research has advocated for polyculturalism and cited its crucial benefits in reducing intergroup conflict. In addition to this, the direction of influence of culture mixing have shown to impact this perceived cultural contamination where people are more positive towards heritage outflow situations, where one’s heritage culture is represented elsewhere and is influencing another culture. This study examined the relationship between two Cultural Ideologies (i.e., Polyculturalism and Multiculturalism) and Culture Mixing Flow (i.e., Heritage Outflow and Foreign Inflow) on people’s attitudes towards culture mixing. Potential moderators were also tested to provide more depth into this relationship. Participants were primed with either one of the two cultural ideologies or a control prime, before proceeding with responding to a business case involving either a heritage outflow situation or a foreign inflow situation. Results indicate that the benefits of polyculturalism was absent in this Singaporean sample. Additionally, the culture mixing flow had a significant impact on people’s attitudes towards culture mixing where people generally had more positive attitudes towards heritage outflow culture mixing than foreign inflow ones, this effect was moderated by prior travel experience.
author2 Bobby K. Cheon
author_facet Bobby K. Cheon
Koh, Wayne Jyh Chee
format Final Year Project
author Koh, Wayne Jyh Chee
author_sort Koh, Wayne Jyh Chee
title Effects of cultural ideologies and culture mixing flow on attitudes toward culture mixing
title_short Effects of cultural ideologies and culture mixing flow on attitudes toward culture mixing
title_full Effects of cultural ideologies and culture mixing flow on attitudes toward culture mixing
title_fullStr Effects of cultural ideologies and culture mixing flow on attitudes toward culture mixing
title_full_unstemmed Effects of cultural ideologies and culture mixing flow on attitudes toward culture mixing
title_sort effects of cultural ideologies and culture mixing flow on attitudes toward culture mixing
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139441
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