Metacognition fosters cultural learning : evidence from individual differences and situational prompts.

We investigated the role of metacognition in the process by which people learn new cultural norms from experiential feedback. In a lab paradigm, participants received many trials of simulated interpersonal situations in a new culture, each of which required them to make a choice, and then provided t...

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Main Authors: Morris, Michael W., Savani, Krishna, Fincher, Katrina
Other Authors: Nanyang Business School
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144487
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1444872023-05-19T07:31:16Z Metacognition fosters cultural learning : evidence from individual differences and situational prompts. Morris, Michael W. Savani, Krishna Fincher, Katrina Nanyang Business School Business::Management Intercultural Competence Learning We investigated the role of metacognition in the process by which people learn new cultural norms from experiential feedback. In a lab paradigm, participants received many trials of simulated interpersonal situations in a new culture, each of which required them to make a choice, and then provided them with evaluative feedback about the accuracy of their choice with regard to local norms. Studies 1 to 3 found that participants higher on an individual difference dimension of metacognitive proclivity learned to adhere to the local norms faster. This relationship held up in simple and complex situations, that is, when the feedback was noisy rather than completely reliable, and it also held up when possibly confounding individual differences were controlled (Study 2). Further evidence suggested that the underlying mechanism is the largely implicit process of error monitoring and reactive error-based updating. A measure of surprise (an indicator of error monitoring) mediated the link between metacognitive proclivity and faster learning (Study 3). In experiments that varied the task so as to afford different kinds of metacognitive processing, participants learned faster with posterror prompts but not with postaccuracy prompts (Study 4). Further, they learned faster with nondirected prompts that merely provided a break for processing rather with prompts that directly instructed them to reason explicitly (Study 5). We discuss the implications of these findings for models of culture, first- and second-culture learning, and for training and selecting people for foreign or intercultural roles. Ministry of Education (MOE) Nanyang Technological University Accepted version This research was supported by U.S. Army Research Institute Grant W911NF-13-1-0113 awarded to Michael W. Morris, a Nanyang Assistant Professorship Grant awarded to Krishna Savani, and Singapore Ministry of Education Social Science Research Thematic Grant MOE2016-SSRTG006 awarded to Krishna Savani. 2020-11-06T08:21:55Z 2020-11-06T08:21:55Z 2019 Journal Article Morris, M. W., Savani, K., & Fincher, K. (2019). Metacognition fosters cultural learning : evidence from individual differences and situational prompts. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology: Interpersonal Relations and Group Processes, 116(1), 46-68. doi:10.1037/pspi0000149 0022-3514 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144487 10.1037/pspi0000149 30596446 1 116 46 68 en Journal of Personality and Social Psychology: Interpersonal Relations and Group Processes © American Psychological Association, 2019. This paper is not the copy of record and may not exactly replicate the authoritative document published in the APA journal. Please do not copy or cite without author's permission. The final article is available, upon publication, at: 10.1037/pspi0000149 application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Business::Management
Intercultural Competence
Learning
spellingShingle Business::Management
Intercultural Competence
Learning
Morris, Michael W.
Savani, Krishna
Fincher, Katrina
Metacognition fosters cultural learning : evidence from individual differences and situational prompts.
description We investigated the role of metacognition in the process by which people learn new cultural norms from experiential feedback. In a lab paradigm, participants received many trials of simulated interpersonal situations in a new culture, each of which required them to make a choice, and then provided them with evaluative feedback about the accuracy of their choice with regard to local norms. Studies 1 to 3 found that participants higher on an individual difference dimension of metacognitive proclivity learned to adhere to the local norms faster. This relationship held up in simple and complex situations, that is, when the feedback was noisy rather than completely reliable, and it also held up when possibly confounding individual differences were controlled (Study 2). Further evidence suggested that the underlying mechanism is the largely implicit process of error monitoring and reactive error-based updating. A measure of surprise (an indicator of error monitoring) mediated the link between metacognitive proclivity and faster learning (Study 3). In experiments that varied the task so as to afford different kinds of metacognitive processing, participants learned faster with posterror prompts but not with postaccuracy prompts (Study 4). Further, they learned faster with nondirected prompts that merely provided a break for processing rather with prompts that directly instructed them to reason explicitly (Study 5). We discuss the implications of these findings for models of culture, first- and second-culture learning, and for training and selecting people for foreign or intercultural roles.
author2 Nanyang Business School
author_facet Nanyang Business School
Morris, Michael W.
Savani, Krishna
Fincher, Katrina
format Article
author Morris, Michael W.
Savani, Krishna
Fincher, Katrina
author_sort Morris, Michael W.
title Metacognition fosters cultural learning : evidence from individual differences and situational prompts.
title_short Metacognition fosters cultural learning : evidence from individual differences and situational prompts.
title_full Metacognition fosters cultural learning : evidence from individual differences and situational prompts.
title_fullStr Metacognition fosters cultural learning : evidence from individual differences and situational prompts.
title_full_unstemmed Metacognition fosters cultural learning : evidence from individual differences and situational prompts.
title_sort metacognition fosters cultural learning : evidence from individual differences and situational prompts.
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144487
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