2019
DOI: 10.1177/0003122419875638
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Mapping Cultural Schemas: From Theory to Method

Abstract: A growing body of research in sociology uses the concept of cultural schemas to explain how culture influences beliefs and actions. However, this work often relies on belief or attitude measures gleaned from survey data as indicators of schemas, failing to measure the cognitive associations that constitute schemas. In this article, we propose a concept-association-based approach for collecting data about individuals’ schematic associations, and a corresponding method for modeling concept network representation… Show more

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Cited by 94 publications
(131 citation statements)
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“…Schemas or shared meanings are complex structures of mental representations (Goldberg, 2011), either innate or acquired through experience and acculturation (Zerubavel, 1997), which organize knowledge about reality (Strauss & Quinn, 1997). They play a key role in cultural analysis because individuals' world experiences are understood through them (DiMaggio, 1997;Hunzaker & Valentino, 2019). Thinking about culture as schemas leads individuals to imagine that although culture is embodied by individual cognitive structures, it also reflects socialization and information exchange processes at the collective sphere, whose meanings tend to be shared.…”
Section: Schemas As Consensus and As Tightnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Schemas or shared meanings are complex structures of mental representations (Goldberg, 2011), either innate or acquired through experience and acculturation (Zerubavel, 1997), which organize knowledge about reality (Strauss & Quinn, 1997). They play a key role in cultural analysis because individuals' world experiences are understood through them (DiMaggio, 1997;Hunzaker & Valentino, 2019). Thinking about culture as schemas leads individuals to imagine that although culture is embodied by individual cognitive structures, it also reflects socialization and information exchange processes at the collective sphere, whose meanings tend to be shared.…”
Section: Schemas As Consensus and As Tightnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Assumingly, the CCA application can be useful for three reasons. First, although research about shared meaning schemas has gained prominence in cultural studies (Hunzaker & Valentino, 2019;Rawlings & Childress, 2019), it has been ignored in organizational studies, despite the acknowledgment that organizational culture manifests itself through shared schemas (Harris, 1994;Miranda et al, 2015). Second, the method introduced in the current study Elementally, from a cultural perspective, the meaning of things -events, objects, and experiences -refers to how the subjects interpret them, attributing quality and significance to their experience.…”
Section: Introduction Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…"religion as irrelevant") (Edgell and Hull 2017, p. 305). Despite the fact that schemas are a part of nondeclarative personal culture (Wood et al 2019), specific demographic groups are theorized as having shared schemas, based on analyses of interpersonal patterns (Hunzaker and Valentino 2019). And others describe schemas as "objective in the sense of being shared, publicly available understandings" (Blair-Loy 2001, p. 689) or forms of public culture strategically used to influence others (de Laat and Baumann 2016).…”
Section: The Cognitive Turn In Cultural Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%