Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. proach to academic and cultural psychology are discussed. _R ecent research in cultural psychology has given renewed at-tention to the problem of understanding Japanese behavior, experience, and development (Kitayama and Markus 1994; Stigler et al. 1990). In terms of the cultural psychology of the Japanese, the studies by Markus and Kitayama ...

  2. AP Psychology Reading Guide; Module 26. Learning. Click the card to flip 👆. The process of acquiring new and relatively enduring information or behaviors. Click the card to flip 👆. 1 / 26.

  3. Shinto is an animistic belief system. Shinto’s kami are collectively called yaoyorozu no kami, an expres-sion literally meaning 8 million kami but interpreted as meaning myriad. After World War II, Shinto ceased to be Japan’s state religion, although it is still considered the native religion of Japan.

  4. Japanese culture is collectivistic by nature, and there are some culturally indigenous patterns which govern forming relationships in Japan. One of the important patterns is hierarchy. Counselling and psychotherapy are based on Western concepts and the Japanese view them diferently. When the Japanese provide or use counselling and psychotherapy ...

    • Yuko Nippoda
    • 2012
  5. Feb 19, 2021 · Vulnerability, Acceptance, and Courage in Japanese Culture. Shikata ga nai offers the courage to change by accepting what can't be changed. Posted February 19, 2021....

  6. Sep 6, 2021 · Hedataru — (v) ‘To separate one’s things from another, to set them apart’. Najimu — (v)‘To become attached to, familiar with, used to’. Personal space in relationships between people in Japan can be described with these two words, which take meaning in both a physical and psychological sense. Friendships with najimi (the noun form ...

  7. Japanese lives during the period when Emperor Hirohito lay dying. Shimizu also does not note that psychological attributes presented in cultural iden-tity psychology, as well as in the Nihonjinron literature, as uniquely Japanese (e.g., har-mony, group-orientation, and empathy) are frequently outcomes of state-sponsored cul-tural ideologies.