Collaboration at a microscale: Cultural differences in family interactions.

Andrew Dayton, Itzel Aceves-Azuara, B. Rogoff
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Using a holistic, process approach, this article brings attention to cultural differences in the prevalence of fluid synchrony in collaboration, at a microanalytic scale of analysis that is embodied in the processes of everyday life. We build on findings that in a number of Indigenous American communities, fluid and harmonious collaboration is prioritized both in community organization at a scale of years and centuries, and in everyday family interactions and researcher-organized tasks at a scale of days, hours, or minutes. We examined whether this sophisticated fluid collaboration could be seen even at a scale of fractions of seconds. At a microscale of 200-millisecond segments, Guatemalan Mayan triads of mothers and children frequently engaged mutually, in fluid synchrony together, when exploring novel objects. They did so more commonly than did European American mother-child triads, who usually engaged solo or in dyads, with one person left out, or resisted each other. This microanalysis of mutuality in family interactions reveals the role of culture in the foundations of thinking and working together in both Mayan and European American communities, and the fruitfulness of considering developmental processes holistically.
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微观协作:家庭互动中的文化差异。
本文采用整体的过程方法,在日常生活过程中体现的微观分析尺度上,关注协作中流体同步流行的文化差异。我们的研究发现,在许多美洲土著社区中,流畅而和谐的合作在以年和世纪为尺度的社区组织中,以及在以天、小时或分钟为尺度的日常家庭互动和研究人员组织的任务中都是优先考虑的。我们研究了这种复杂的流体协作是否可以在几秒钟的时间内看到。在200毫秒片段的微观尺度上,危地马拉玛雅人的母亲和儿童三位一体在探索新物体时,经常以流体同步的方式相互参与。他们这样做比欧美母子三合会更常见,后者通常是单独或二人组,其中一人被排除在外,或者相互抵制。这种对家庭互动中相互关系的微观分析揭示了文化在玛雅和欧美社区共同思考和合作的基础上的作用,以及全面考虑发展过程的成果。
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