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  1. Culture and Cognition: What is Universal about the Representation of Color Experience?Kimberly Jameson - 2005 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 5 (3-4):293-348.
    Existing research in color naming and categorization primarily reflects two opposing views: A Cultural Relativist view that posits color perception is greatly shaped by culturally specific language associations and perceptual learning, and a Universalist view that emphasizes panhuman shared color processing as the basis for color naming similarities within and across cultures. Recent empirical evidence finds color processing differs both within and across cultures. This divergent color processing raises new questions about the sources of previously observed cultural coherence and cross-cultural (...)
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  • Mapping the Conceptual Space of Jealousy.Katherine Hanson Sobraske, James S. Boster & Steven J. Gaulin - 2013 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 41 (3):249-270.
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  • Implications of the mental models approach for cultivation theory.David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, John Davies & Beverly Roskos-Ewoldsen - 2004 - Communications 29 (3):345-363.
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  • Owls, Climates, and Experts.Robert L. Munroe & Mary Gauvain - 2018 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 18 (1-2):66-88.
    The cognitive research of Atran and Medin plus preliminary cross-cultural inquiry about owls permitted the formulation of a hypothesis: Inhabitants of cold-climate societies were likely to be, in relative terms, “experts” on owls. Subsequent cross-cultural study affirmed that in cold-climate societies, in contrast to others, the habits and characteristics of owls were more frequently noted, these birds were more often used functionally, and the human inhabitants of cold-climate areas manifested fewer negative supernaturalistic interpretations of owl behavior. For the sample as (...)
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