Multiculturalism on a neurological level : an fMRI study of in-group/out-group perception among Singaporean chinese females

Singapore is a unique multicultural city where people from four ethnic groups converged to form the nation’s population in the early days and lived in close proximity. Many scholars have studied the environmental influences on individuals’ perceptions of in-group/out-group, but few have investigated...

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Main Author: Choo, Amanda May Yeng
Other Authors: Gianluca Esposito
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74117
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-741172019-12-10T12:17:08Z Multiculturalism on a neurological level : an fMRI study of in-group/out-group perception among Singaporean chinese females Choo, Amanda May Yeng Gianluca Esposito School of Humanities and Social Sciences Social and Affective Neuroscience Lab DRNTU::Social sciences DRNTU::Humanities Singapore is a unique multicultural city where people from four ethnic groups converged to form the nation’s population in the early days and lived in close proximity. Many scholars have studied the environmental influences on individuals’ perceptions of in-group/out-group, but few have investigated the impact of strong exposure and frequent personal contact with other ethnic group members on processes of in-group/out-group memberships on a neurological level. Aside from ethnic group-membership, individuals are also driven by cultural membership, creating an enlarged in-group. Therefore, the current study uses fMRI to explore how Singaporean Chinese females (n = 27) perceived in-group faces (IFs) and out-group faces (OFs) after being primed with cultural contexts (i.e. local Singaporean; CC) and ethnic contexts (i.e. foreign; EC). While using whole-brain analyses between conditions, neural activity was expected to differ in the fusiform gyrus, occipital cortex, amygdala and anterior cingulate cortex, which are substantially recruited for facial and in-group/out-group processing. Results reflect hypotheses: (1) CC primes evoked more neural activations than EC primes when viewing IFs, (2) IFs induced greater neural activations than OFs under CC primes, (3) Interestingly, EC primes elicited more prominent neural activations than CC primes when viewing OFs, against our hypothesis. Activated regions included the fusiform gyrus, middle occipital cortex, and unexpectedly, superior temporal gyrus, cuneus and lingual gyrus. Consequently, it appears that participants do recognize an enlarged cultural in-group membership on a neurological, automatic and unbiased level, thus demonstrating that cultural environment can inspire a spontaneous sense of belonging to a multi-ethnic group. Bachelor of Arts 2018-04-27T01:32:39Z 2018-04-27T01:32:39Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74117 en Nanyang Technological University 73 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences
DRNTU::Humanities
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences
DRNTU::Humanities
Choo, Amanda May Yeng
Multiculturalism on a neurological level : an fMRI study of in-group/out-group perception among Singaporean chinese females
description Singapore is a unique multicultural city where people from four ethnic groups converged to form the nation’s population in the early days and lived in close proximity. Many scholars have studied the environmental influences on individuals’ perceptions of in-group/out-group, but few have investigated the impact of strong exposure and frequent personal contact with other ethnic group members on processes of in-group/out-group memberships on a neurological level. Aside from ethnic group-membership, individuals are also driven by cultural membership, creating an enlarged in-group. Therefore, the current study uses fMRI to explore how Singaporean Chinese females (n = 27) perceived in-group faces (IFs) and out-group faces (OFs) after being primed with cultural contexts (i.e. local Singaporean; CC) and ethnic contexts (i.e. foreign; EC). While using whole-brain analyses between conditions, neural activity was expected to differ in the fusiform gyrus, occipital cortex, amygdala and anterior cingulate cortex, which are substantially recruited for facial and in-group/out-group processing. Results reflect hypotheses: (1) CC primes evoked more neural activations than EC primes when viewing IFs, (2) IFs induced greater neural activations than OFs under CC primes, (3) Interestingly, EC primes elicited more prominent neural activations than CC primes when viewing OFs, against our hypothesis. Activated regions included the fusiform gyrus, middle occipital cortex, and unexpectedly, superior temporal gyrus, cuneus and lingual gyrus. Consequently, it appears that participants do recognize an enlarged cultural in-group membership on a neurological, automatic and unbiased level, thus demonstrating that cultural environment can inspire a spontaneous sense of belonging to a multi-ethnic group.
author2 Gianluca Esposito
author_facet Gianluca Esposito
Choo, Amanda May Yeng
format Final Year Project
author Choo, Amanda May Yeng
author_sort Choo, Amanda May Yeng
title Multiculturalism on a neurological level : an fMRI study of in-group/out-group perception among Singaporean chinese females
title_short Multiculturalism on a neurological level : an fMRI study of in-group/out-group perception among Singaporean chinese females
title_full Multiculturalism on a neurological level : an fMRI study of in-group/out-group perception among Singaporean chinese females
title_fullStr Multiculturalism on a neurological level : an fMRI study of in-group/out-group perception among Singaporean chinese females
title_full_unstemmed Multiculturalism on a neurological level : an fMRI study of in-group/out-group perception among Singaporean chinese females
title_sort multiculturalism on a neurological level : an fmri study of in-group/out-group perception among singaporean chinese females
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74117
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