---
license: Apache-2.0
name: intercultural-discourse
description: Cross-cultural communication frameworks for understanding discourse patterns across cultures
category: Cognitive Science & Decision Making
tags:
  - intercultural
  - communication
  - discourse
  - cross-cultural
  - pragmatics
---

# SKILL.md — Intercultural Discourse Analysis & Multi-Perspectival Interpretation

## DECISION POINTS

### Framework Selection Matrix

**When analyzing cross-cultural discourse, choose your approach:**

```
Single Framework Analysis:
├─ If: Simple, low-stakes interaction with power symmetry
├─ If: Time-constrained preliminary analysis needed
└─ Use: Standard conversation analysis coding only

Layered Framework Analysis:
├─ If: Power asymmetry present (teacher/student, expert/novice)
├─ If: Cultural backgrounds differ significantly
├─ If: Previous single-framework analysis felt incomplete
└─ Use: Sequential application of 2-3 frameworks, preserve contradictions

Emergent Cultural Analysis:
├─ If: Patterns seem culturally specific but unclear which concepts apply
├─ If: Standard coding produces suspiciously clean results
└─ Use: Data-driven cultural pattern identification first, then framework application

Foregrounded Cultural Analysis:
├─ If: Specific cultural concept suspected (e.g., face-saving, hierarchy respect)
├─ If: Behavior looks like "failure" but participants seem comfortable
└─ Use: Apply cultural lens first, then check against other frameworks
```

### Breakdown Detection Decision Tree

```
Observed smooth interaction →
├─ Low power distance context?
│   ├─ Yes → Likely genuine comprehension
│   └─ No → Test for hidden breakdown
└─ High power distance context?
    ├─ Check for minimal responses, quick agreements
    ├─ Look for topic avoidance patterns
    └─ If present → Assume hidden breakdown until proven otherwise
```

### Data Reuse vs. Recollection

```
Have existing relevant data? →
├─ Collected for different question?
│   ├─ Contextual notes preserved? → Revisit data
│   └─ Only transcripts remain? → Consider recollection
├─ Same question, different framework needed?
│   └─ Always revisit with new framework
└─ No existing data? → New collection required
```

## FAILURE MODES

### 1. Smooth Interaction Fallacy
**Detection Rule:** If failure/repair rates < 5% in cross-cultural or hierarchical interaction
**Symptoms:** Clean transcripts, high agreement rates, minimal back-and-forth
**Diagnosis:** Mistaking compliance for comprehension; hidden breakdown present
**Fix:** Apply face-sensitive breakdown detection; look for acceptance without elaboration

### 2. Single-Lens Tunnel Vision
**Detection Rule:** If only one analytical framework applied and results feel definitive
**Symptoms:** Overly clean patterns, no analytical contradictions, quick conclusions
**Diagnosis:** Surface-level coding masquerading as complete analysis
**Fix:** Apply second framework; document tensions between interpretations

### 3. Anglocentric Default Bias
**Detection Rule:** If silence/minimal response coded as disengagement or failure
**Symptoms:** Pathologizing culturally appropriate communication styles
**Diagnosis:** Applying Western discourse norms as universal standards
**Fix:** Research participant cultural background; reframe "problems" as competent strategies

### 4. Evaluation Frame Contamination
**Detection Rule:** If interviewee responses are short, "correct," but lack elaboration
**Symptoms:** Participant optimizing for accuracy rather than disclosure
**Diagnosis:** Primary knower inversion not established; participant thinks they're being tested
**Fix:** Reframe elicitation to position participant as expert; signal data-gathering not evaluation

### 5. Premature Synthesis Collapse
**Detection Rule:** If multiple frameworks forced into single "master interpretation"
**Symptoms:** Analytical contradictions glossed over or ignored
**Diagnosis:** Treating frameworks as redundant routes to same truth
**Fix:** Document contradictions as findings; preserve multiple valid interpretations

## WORKED EXAMPLES

### Example 1: Thai Student Interview Analysis

**Initial Single-Framework Analysis:**
- Applied standard IRF (Initiation-Response-Feedback) coding
- Results: 89% "successful" exchanges, minimal repair sequences
- Interpretation: Good comprehension, effective communication

**Red Flag Recognition:**
- Responses consistently brief despite open questions
- No clarification requests despite complex topics
- High agreement rate with interviewer interpretations

**Layered Reanalysis Process:**

**Layer 1 - Power Dynamics Check:**
- Interviewer = native speaker teacher (high authority)
- Interviewee = L2 student (low status)
- → Primary knower inversion risk: HIGH

**Layer 2 - Cultural Framework (Sam Ruam - Thai Composure):**
- Reframed "minimal response" as competent composure maintenance
- Silence after questions = thoughtful consideration, not confusion
- Agreement patterns = face-saving, not necessarily comprehension

**Layer 3 - Hidden Breakdown Detection:**
- Searched for acceptance-without-elaboration patterns
- Found 23 instances where student agreed but couldn't expand
- Identified topic avoidance around cultural comparison questions

**Final Multi-Lens Interpretation:**
- Framework 1: Surface success (IRF coding)
- Framework 2: Cultural competence (sam ruam lens)
- Framework 3: Hidden comprehension gaps (breakdown analysis)
- **Synthesis:** All three valid; contradiction reveals interaction's complexity

### Example 2: Medical Consultation Failure Detection

**Scenario:** Doctor-patient interaction, patient from hierarchical culture

**Decision Path Applied:**
1. Power asymmetry? YES → Use layered approach
2. Cultural difference? YES → Foreground cultural lens
3. Smooth surface interaction? YES → Test for hidden breakdown

**Step 1 - Surface Analysis:**
- Patient says "yes doctor" frequently
- No explicit confusion signals
- Standard coding: successful information transfer

**Step 2 - Hidden Breakdown Check:**
- Searched for elaboration failures after "yes"
- Found patient couldn't explain treatment steps when asked
- Identified acceptance-without-comprehension pattern

**Step 3 - Cultural Reframe:**
- Patient's "yes" = respect acknowledgment, not comprehension signal
- Questioning doctor = face-threatening in patient's cultural frame
- Silence ≠ understanding; silence = appropriate deference

**Outcome:** Revealed systematic comprehension gaps hidden by culturally appropriate response patterns

## QUALITY GATES

Analysis complete when ALL conditions met:

- [ ] At least 2 analytical frameworks applied to same data
- [ ] Power dynamics between participants explicitly analyzed
- [ ] Cultural background of all participants researched and documented
- [ ] Hidden breakdown patterns specifically searched for and documented
- [ ] Contradictions between frameworks preserved rather than resolved
- [ ] Examples of what each framework reveals that others miss identified
- [ ] Distinction made between what was said vs. what was understood
- [ ] Face-saving behaviors identified and separated from comprehension indicators
- [ ] Primary knower relationship clearly established for each exchange
- [ ] Researcher positionality and potential bias sources documented

## NOT-FOR BOUNDARIES

**This skill is NOT for:**

- **Real-time conversation management** → Use `active-listening` or `cultural-sensitivity` for live interaction
- **Simple same-culture exchanges** → Use `conversation-analysis` for basic discourse patterns
- **Crisis communication** → Use `crisis-communication` for urgent clarity needs
- **Rapid assessment** → Use `quick-cultural-scan` for fast cultural context checks
- **Therapeutic/counseling contexts** → Use `therapeutic-communication` for healing-focused dialogue
- **Legal/formal proceedings** → Use `formal-discourse-analysis` for institutional talk
- **Market research interviews** → Use `interview-methodology` for commercial contexts

**Delegate when:**
- Time pressure requires immediate decisions (use rapid assessment tools)
- Only surface-level patterns needed (use basic conversation analysis)
- Cultural expertise beyond your knowledge required (consult cultural specialists)
- Therapeutic goals primary (route to counseling professionals)
- Legal implications present (route to institutional discourse experts)

**Complexity threshold:** If interaction involves fewer than 3 of these factors, use simpler tools:
- Cultural differences
- Power asymmetries  
- Hidden breakdown risk
- Multiple competing interpretations
- Face-sensitive communication norms