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Abstract:
Highlights * Being part of a culture means knowing what to expect in most everyday situations. * People experience cultural disfluency if a culture-based expectation is not met. * This undermines the feeling that way things are now the way they ought to be. * Undermining inherence undermines essentialism and heightens self-uncertainty. * Effects are stable across three countries (China, Israel, the U.S.). Abstract Being part of a culture means knowing what to expect in most everyday situations --with the implication that something may be awry if unfolding situation mismatches culture-based expectation. We tested the prediction that culture-based mismatches challenge people's sense that current patterns (e.g. the color of money, the taste of toothpaste) represent a natural order, calling into question whether social categories have stable essences. To do so, we asked people in China, Israel, and the U.S. (N = 1803) to rate products (e.g., breakfast plates, wedding photographs, Valentines) then complete unrelated scales, randomly assigning them to products that matched or mismatched their respective cultural expectations. Exposure to mismatch reduced psychological inherence --the feeling that existing patterns in the world reflect how things ought to be in unrelated domains and this reduced cultural essentializing (the feeling that cultures have fixed essences that cannot change). Effects were small-to-moderate-sized and consistent across countries. Author Affiliation: (a) University of Southern California, United States of America (b) The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel * Corresponding author. Article History: Received 9 March 2018; Revised 3 June 2019; Accepted 9 June 2019 (footnote)[white star] This paper has been recommended for acceptance by Kimberly Rios. (footnote)[white star][white star] Author note: we thank the USC culture and self lab group for helpful suggestions. Byline: Ying Lin (a), Sharon Arieli (b), Daphna Oyserman [daphna.oyserman@gmail.com] (a,*)
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Item Citation: Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. Sept, 2019, Vol. 84Accession Number: edsgcl.596907648; Publication Type: Academic Journal; Source: Journal of Experimental Social Psychology; Language: English; Publication Date: 20190901; Rights: Copyright 2019 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved., COPYRIGHT 2019 Elsevier B.V.; Imprint: Elsevier B.V., 2019.