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  1. Culture and systems of thought: Holistic versus analytic cognition.Richard E. Nisbett, Kaiping Peng, Incheol Choi & Ara Norenzayan - 2001 - Psychological Review 108 (2):291-310.
    The authors find East Asians to be holistic, attending to the entire field and assigning causality to it, making relatively little use of categories and formal logic, and relying on "dialectical" reasoning, whereas Westerners, are more analytic, paying attention primarily to the object and the categories to which it belongs and using rules, including formal logic, to understand its behavior. The 2 types of cognitive processes are embedded in different naive metaphysical systems and tacit epistemologies. The authors speculate that the (...)
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  • A holistic account of the own-race effect in face recognition: evidence from a cross-cultural study.James W. Tanaka, Markus Kiefer & Cindy M. Bukach - 2004 - Cognition 93 (1):B1-B9.
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  • Tolerance for distorted faces: Challenges to a configural processing account of familiar face recognition.Adam Sandford & A. Mike Burton - 2014 - Cognition 132 (3):262-268.
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  • Curious eyes: Individual differences in personality predict eye movement behavior in scene-viewing.Evan F. Risko, Nicola C. Anderson, Sophie Lanthier & Alan Kingstone - 2012 - Cognition 122 (1):86-90.
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  • An own-race advantage for components as well as configurations in face recognition.William G. Hayward, Gillian Rhodes & Adrian Schwaninger - 2008 - Cognition 106 (2):1017-1027.
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