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Correlational studies on culture and behaviour

Studies on the effects of culture on behaviour often use correlational studies because culture isn't considered an independent variable but researchers want to see if it's related to other co-variables.

One common method used to study the effects of culture on behaviour is the correlational study. This method involves measuring the strength of a relationship between two or more co-variables. In correlational studies on the effects of culture on behaviour, one variable is related to culture (e.g. cultural dimensions) and the other is related to behaviour (e.g. conformity, mate preference or helping others). The results might show a positive correlation (which means as one variable increases, so does the other) or a negative correlation (as one variable increases, the other decreases).

Unlike experimental studies that investigate the effects of an independent variable on a dependent variable, a correlational study doesn’t have IVs and DVs because we don’t know the direction of the relationship. There are also not enough controls put in place, so effects of extraneous variables aren’t controlled and may be influencing the relationship. This is a major limitation that will be explained later.

When using continuous data (e.g. scores on a cultural dimension and rates of helping), one variable can be plotted along the y axis and the other along the x axis. Image 1 shows a strong correlation, 2 shows a weak correlation and 3 shows no correlation. A correlation coefficient of >06. is considered high, around 0.4 is moderate and about 0.2 is weak.

How are correlational studies conducted?

Correlational studies on culture and behaviour must first gather data on the co-variables in the study. In psychological studies one co-variable is nearly always a measure of behaviour or cognitive process. Cultural factors studied in correlational studies are often related to cultural dimensions. For example, a culture’s score on the individualism/collectivism scale could be a co-variable. Questionnaires are commonly used to gather the data needed to calculate the correlation.

Why are correlational studies conducted?

One major reason correlation studies are conducted is because they allow researchers to study variables that are naturally occuring in large populations. However, unlike natural or quasi-experiments, there is no identifiable “treatment” because either there are too many possible extraneous variables and/or the variable is an innate personal quality (like cultural background) and so this isn’t considered an independent variable. We can also conduct correlational studies to see if a relationship does exist, and from these findings experimental studies can then be designed to explore the relationship further.

What are some examples?

What are the limitations?

  1. Correlation does not mean causation: this is the fundamental limitation of using correlational studies. Just because two variables are related, it doesn’t mean that one is causing the other. For example, we might want to conclude that having lots of wealth (high GDP) causes people to not want to help others as they become greedy and selfish. But could it be that not helping others was what caused their wealth? When we’re not sure which direction the relationship is working as in this example, we call this bidirectional ambiguity.
  2. Too many extraneous variables: another way to explain limitations of correlational studies is to not only show how A could influence B, but also how B could influence A (i.e. explain bidirectional ambiguity), but also how C could be influencing A or B. For example, in studies comparing individualistic and collectivist cultures like Levine’s on the importance of love, we could conclude that variable A (cultural values of ind/coll) is affecting B (how important love is), but could religious beliefs (variable C) be a factor? USA, UK and Australia are Western, predominantly Christian countries, compared with Muslim, Hindu and Buddhism for Pakistan, India and Thailand, respectively.

Exam Tip: Technically speaking, the IB could ask about the use of research methods on “cultural origins of behaviour and cognition” or “cultural influences on individual attitudes, identity and behaviours.” My advice is to keep it simple and make sure you can explain how correlational studies are used to study the effects of culture on behaviour. 

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