Authors
Michael Wei Liang Chee, Hui Zheng, Joshua Oon Soo Goh, Denise Park, Bradley P Sutton
Publication date
2011/5/1
Journal
Journal of cognitive neuroscience
Volume
23
Issue
5
Pages
1065-1079
Publisher
MIT Press
Description
There is an emergent literature suggesting that East Asians and Westerners differ in cognitive processes because of cultural biases to process information holistically (East Asians) or analytically (Westerners). To evaluate the possibility that such differences are accompanied by differences in brain structure, we conducted a large comparative study on cognitively matched young and old adults from two cultural/ethnic groups—Chinese Singaporeans and non-Asian Americans—that involved a total of 140 persons. Young predominantly White American adults were found to have higher cortical thickness in frontal, parietal, and medial-temporal polymodal association areas in both hemispheres. These findings were replicated using voxel-based morphometry applied to the same data set. Differences in cortical thickness observed between young volunteers were not significant in older subjects as a whole. However …
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