TY - JOUR
T1 - Culture shapes spontaneous brain dynamics–Shared versus idiosyncratic neural features among Chinese versus Canadian subjects
AU - Xu, Jiawei
AU - Wainio-Theberge, Soren
AU - Wolff, Annemarie
AU - Qin, Pengmin
AU - Zhang, Yihui
AU - She, Xuan
AU - Wang, Yingying
AU - Wolman, Angelika
AU - Smith, David
AU - Ignaszewski, Julia
AU - Choueiry, Joelle
AU - Knott, Verner
AU - Scalabrini, Andrea
AU - Northoff, Georg
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Environmental factors, such as culture, are known to shape individual variation in brain activity including spontaneous activity, but less is known about their population-level effects. Eastern and Western cultures differ strongly in their cultural norms about relationships between individuals. For example, the collectivism, interdependence and tightness of Eastern cultures relative to the individualism, independence and looseness of Western cultures, promote interpersonal connectedness and coordination. Do such cultural contexts therefore influence the group-level variability of their cultural members’ spontaneous brain activity? Using novel methods adapted from studies of inter-subject neural synchrony, we compare the group-level variability of resting state EEG dynamics in Chinese and Canadian samples. We observe that Chinese subjects show significantly higher inter-subject correlation and lower inter-subject distance in their EEG power spectra than Canadian subjects, as well as lower variability in theta power and alpha peak frequency. We demonstrate, for the first time, different relationships among subjects’ resting state brain dynamics in Chinese and Canadian samples. These results point to more idiosyncratic neural dynamics among Canadian participants, compared with more shared neural features in Chinese participants.
AB - Environmental factors, such as culture, are known to shape individual variation in brain activity including spontaneous activity, but less is known about their population-level effects. Eastern and Western cultures differ strongly in their cultural norms about relationships between individuals. For example, the collectivism, interdependence and tightness of Eastern cultures relative to the individualism, independence and looseness of Western cultures, promote interpersonal connectedness and coordination. Do such cultural contexts therefore influence the group-level variability of their cultural members’ spontaneous brain activity? Using novel methods adapted from studies of inter-subject neural synchrony, we compare the group-level variability of resting state EEG dynamics in Chinese and Canadian samples. We observe that Chinese subjects show significantly higher inter-subject correlation and lower inter-subject distance in their EEG power spectra than Canadian subjects, as well as lower variability in theta power and alpha peak frequency. We demonstrate, for the first time, different relationships among subjects’ resting state brain dynamics in Chinese and Canadian samples. These results point to more idiosyncratic neural dynamics among Canadian participants, compared with more shared neural features in Chinese participants.
KW - Culture
KW - EEG
KW - inter-subject variability;
KW - resting state activity
KW - spectral dynamics
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U2 - 10.1080/17470919.2023.2278199
DO - 10.1080/17470919.2023.2278199
M3 - Article
C2 - 37909114
AN - SCOPUS:85176909230
SN - 1747-0919
VL - 18
SP - 312
EP - 330
JO - Social Neuroscience
JF - Social Neuroscience
IS - 5
ER -