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Does Culture Affect Brain Function? n Questions and Answers from Clinical Neuropsychology n Antonio E. Puente n University of North Carolina at Wilmington n University of Oklahoma School of Medicine n December 7, 2002
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Outline n Purpose of Presentation n Background and Biases n Assumptions and Limitations n Defining Concepts n Examples from Four Neuropsychological Studies n Pragmatic Observations n Theoretical Speculations
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Purpose of Presentation n Summary of 25 Years of Research Where Do Biopsychosocial Variables Fit in Brain Dysfunction? n Searching for a Neuropsychological “g”
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Background and Biases n Not About Correctness; It’s About Science n Ethnicity n Educational n Professional n Theoretical –Sperry –Vygotsky-Luria
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Assumptions and Limitations n Philosophy Vs Science n Functional Vs Organic n Culture Vs Biology n Individual Vs Contextual
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Defining Concepts n Culture (Shared Extra-genetic Knowledge) n Brain and Neuropsychology (Processor of Information; Information about the Processor) n Intelligence and Cognition (Understanding/Tracking/Using Discrete Information)
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Examples from Four Neuropsychological Studies n Background –Grenada, W.I.- Hypertension & Stress –Argentina- Fulbright & the Malvinas –Puerto Rico- APA Visiting Psychologist Program & the Translation of Test
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Examples from Studies: Continued n Intention –Why do Ethnic-Minorities do Poorly on Most Cognitive & Neuropsychological Measures? –Three Generations = Anglo Saxon –Cattell and the Concept of “g” –Is There Common Information Processing Across Cultures?
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Examples From Studies: Four Attempts n Wechsler Intelligence Scales n Luria-Nebraska Battery n Amazon Indians n Russia
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Wechsler Scales: I n Background –Item Bias on the Wechsler Scales –WISC n Puerto Rican Version n WAIS vs WISC
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Wechsler Scales: II n Principal Collaborators In Psych Corp: –William Hrabrick,, Aurelio Prifitera, Michael O’Callahan, David Tulsky n Principal Co-Collaborators: –Alfredo Ardila, Josette Harris, Andres Barona, Laura Herrans (& Monica Rosselli) –Consulting Workgroup (7) n Other Collaborators: –50-70 School and Clinical Neuropsychologists Throughout the US
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Wechsler Scales: III n Time-Frame n Items n Production n Sampling n Standardization
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Wechsler Scales: IV n Time-Frame: –Initial Work= late 1980s-1993 –Formal Work= 1994-2001
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Wechsler Scales: V n Items: –Borrowed Items –Explicit and Implicit Bias –Across Hispanic Subgroup Agreement –Scoring Criteria
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Wechsler Scales: VI n Production: –Using Prior WISC & Foreign Versions –Drawings –Printing –Pricing & Packaging –Production
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Wechsler Scales: VII n Sampling: –Age –Sex –Educational Level (child and parent) –Country of Origin –Acculturation Level –Language Preference of Child –Socio-economic Status
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Wechsler Scales: VIII n Standardization: –Examiners n 36 n Geographical & Cultural Variability n Taped Tryout –Methods n Tryout= 600 n Standardization= 1,000 n Test-Retest= 300
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Wechsler Scales: IX n Current Status: –“On Hold” –No Internal or External Project Director nor Funding
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Luria-Nebraska Neuropsychological Battery: I n Background –National Academy of Neuropsychology 1979 Meeting in Orlando –Luria-North Dakota Neuropsychological Battery –Initial Collaboration with Golden & “Item Interpretation of the Luria-Nebraska Neuropsychological Battery” –Chilean Journal of Psychology (1982)
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LNNB: II n Failed Attempts: –Argentina –Puerto Rico n Spanish Collaborators: –Madrid- Juan Tobal, Antonio Cano, Juan Manuel Cepedez, Itziar Iruarrizaga –Granada- Juan Gody, Juana Garcia. Miguel Perez –Other- Salamanca; TEA, Western Psych.
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LNNB: III n Literature Review: –500 Total Articles on the LNNB –34 on the LNNB and Ethnic/Foreign Samples –4= Children; 30= Adult –Empirical= 23 (BD, Schizophrenia) –Translations= 9
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LNNB: IV n Problems: –Items n Hispanic Subculture n Literal Translation –Copyright n Luria n Christensen n TEA n Western Psychological Services
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LNNB: V n Translation: –Original Translation by Bilingual Neuropsychologist –Back Translation by Two Bilingual Neuropsychologist –New Translation Developed –Discrepancies With English Translation Reconciled
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LNNB: VI n Major Item Changes: –Receptive Speech –Expressive Speech –Writing & Reading –Arithmetic –Intellectual Processes
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LNNB: VII n Sampling: –Total= 232 (men= 126; women= 106) –Mean Age= 39.88 (15-88) –Mean Education= 9.93(0-21)
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LNNB: VIII n Correlations with LNNB I: –Range=.5356 to.7232 –Education= -.48 to -.72 –Scales=.52 to.845
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LNNB: IX n Next Steps: –Publishing Patient Group Info –TEA/Western Psychological Corporation Copyright & Related Difficulties
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Amazon Indians: I n Background: –Culture-free Sample –Caribbean, Latin America, Spain, Russia n Collaborators: –Vivian Andrade (Brazil) –Miguel Perez (Spain)
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Amazon: II First Study n Task –CVLT Type Task (15 words) –Words in Guaranis & Portuguese n Sampling –Total= 20 –Guaranis (educated vs “uneducated”)
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Amazon: III (First Study Continued) n Results: – Verbal Memory n similar number of words in first trial n different learning curves n more words total for indigenous Indians
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Amazon Indians: IV Second Study n Sample –N= 12 per group –Educated vs “non-educated” Guaranis n Tasks –CVLT type task (15 matched words) –12 Figures of indigenous animals –WMS-R Logical Memory –WAIS-R Digit Span –WAIS-R Block Design
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Amazon Indians: V Second Study (continued) n Results –No between-group differences –“Un-educated” Indians did significantly better in motor and visual tasks than in verbal tasks in either language
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Russia n Background –Luria & Vygotsky –Biannual International Luria Conference –Anna Agranovich
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Russia: II n Sample Total = 40 per group USARussia Age28.95 (18-44)29.15 (18-43) Ed.13.68 (12-17)14.25 (12-17)
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Russia: III n Methodology/Instruments Hemisphere Anterior Posterior left/verbalFluencyDigits Forward Digits BackwardVerbal Memory right/visualRuff Figural FluencyVisual Memory Color TrailsClock Test
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Russia: IV n Results TestUSARussia –Verbal Fluency21.7524.18 –Digits Backwards 7.83 6.75 –Digits Forward10.58 9.70 –Verbal Memory41.6543.50 –Visual Memory23.05 22.63 –Clock 8.55 8.83 –RFFT 114.80 103.40 –CTT126.08 38.30 –CTT261.63 75.46
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Some Pragmatic Observations n Translations –Typical vs Required n Translators –Typical vs Required n Norms –Paucity of Data –Heterogeneity of Groups n Criterion Validity –Who is the Reference Value –What is “Brain Damage” n Personnel –Few Academics, in general –Even Fewer Ethnic-Minorities Within the Field
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Some Theoretical Questions n New, Novel, & Extremely Difficult n History and Culture Do Matter n Personal Manipulation of History and Culture Matter Even More n Cultural Knowledge Might be the Manner in Which Natural Selection Expresses Itself in Homo Sapiens n Clinical Neuropsychology Might Help Unravel This Expression
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Answers with Questions: Where Do We Go From Here? n Is Reductionism Enough? n Is the Tabula Rasa Really Blank? n Does Individual Cognition Affect Gene Pool Constitution? n If so, is Culture the Mechanism? n Is Intelligence and Neuropsychological Constructs (e.g. Memory, Problem Solving, etc.) Equal to Understanding of Culture? n If so, Does Mind Emerge from Brain and, in turn, Control Brain?
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Further Information n Address: –Department of Psychology, UNC-W, Wilmington, NC 28403-3297 n E-mail: –puente@uncw.edu n Web Site: –clinicalneuropsychology.us –uncw.edu/people/puente
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