This thesis discusses the method of reflecting on psychological
differences between the West and the East that is responsible
for significant differences in thinking and behaviour in the design
process. I mainly adopted the cross-cultural research method
in order to discover where the benefits could reside for the other
culture.
My interest is rooted in a critical view on globalisation. As a
consequence of globalisation we have been led to believe that
people everywhere share a universal perspective of the world.
I question the truth of a universal point of view.
In cultural psychology and cognitive science, attention has been
focused on the assertion that human cognition is not the same
everywhere. To borrow Kenya Hara’s expression, design is a
behaviour that creates a formal outline for cognizing the world
through designing objects or communication methods. However,
no one has studied the cognitive differences between the East
and the West within the context of design. Huntington, the author
of ‘Clash of civilization’, mentioned that it is dangerous to assume
that “people from different cultural backgrounds think
the same way.”
In this thesis, I discuss the following aspects:
1. cross-cultural cognitive differences and their effects on real life.
2. the relation between design and cultural psychology.
3. how psychological identity can be taken into consideration in
the design process.
The results presented here provide an interface for examining the
way designers consider cultural differences on a psychological
level, as well as the linked experiences of design and
psychological identity in the design process.
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