Stimulus Diffusion: 15 Examples and Definition

Stimulus Diffusion: 15 Examples and Definition

Written by Tio Gabunia (B.Arch, M.Arch)

Tio Gabunia (B.Arch, M.Arch)

Tio Gabunia (B.Arch, M.Arch)

Tio Gabunia is an academic writer and architect based in Tbilisi. He has studied architecture, design, and urban planning at the Georgian Technical University and the University of Lisbon. He has worked in these fields in Georgia, Portugal, and France. Most of Tio’s writings concern philosophy. Other writings include architecture, sociology, urban planning, and economics.

| July 9, 2023

Stimulus Diffusion: 15 Examples and Definition

Reviewed by Chris Drew (PhD)

Chris Drew (PhD)

Chris Drew (PhD)

This article was peer-reviewed and edited by Chris Drew (PhD). The review process on Helpful Professor involves having a PhD level expert fact check, edit, and contribute to articles. Reviewers ensure all content reflects expert academic consensus and is backed up with reference to academic studies. Dr. Drew has published over 20 academic articles in scholarly journals. He is the former editor of the Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education and holds a PhD in Education from ACU.

stimulus diffusion examples definition

Stimulus diffusion is a type of cultural diffusion that occurs when an element of culture changes as it spreads to new areas.

Examples of stimulus diffusion include the change of Pizza after it spread to the United States, evolutions in Hindu practices through South Asia, localized differences in musical tastes, and the development of different football codes around the world.

The concept of stimulus diffusion is studied in AP Human Geography exams.

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Stimulus Diffusion Definition

Stimulus diffusion occurs when culture changes as it spreads to new areas. The term was first introduced in the first half of the twentieth century (Kroeber, 1940).

The further a culture or a cultural item spreads, the more it changes. This type of cultural diffusion can be seen as the foundation for the theories of hyperdiffusionism. Hyperdiffusionism postulates that all major inventions and cultures can be traced back to a single culture (Fritze, 1993, p. 70).

For example, Grafton Elliot Smith asserted that knowledge concerning copper production spread from Egypt to the rest of the world.

He claimed that all major inventions originated in ancient Egypt (Gaillard, 2004, p. 48). This theory has since been abandoned.

Sometimes a specific trait is rejected, but the underlying idea is accepted, resulting in stimulus diffusion. An example would be the domestication of reindeer by the Siberians.

The Siberians domesticated reindeer only after they observed that other cultures had domesticated cattle.

They had no use for cattle, but the idea of domesticating herds of animals appealed to them, and they began domesticating reindeer, an animal they had long hunted (Domosh et al., 2011, pp. 11-12).

Stimulus Diffusion Examples

Stimulus Diffusion Case Studies

1. Porcelain in Europe

Chinese porcelain had been coming to Europe for almost two hundred years before the Europeans decided to produce it themselves to circumvent the heavy expense of importing it. The necessary kaolin deposits were discovered after considerable effort.

Technically, Europeans were not the first to invent technologies for producing porcelain, but they did it relatively independently. Nevertheless, the goal of developing porcelain was set because the achievement was observed in another culture. The originality for the Europeans was in the development of techniques for producing porcelain.

If it were not for the existence of Chinese porcelain, there is no reason to think that Europeans would have invented it when they did.

2. Algebra in Asia

In the thirteenth century, a unique form of algebra developed in China. The principles were different from those of Greek, Arabic, or European algebra, despite being influenced by other forms of algebra around the world.

Its development continued roughly between 1245 and 1305 (Kroeber, 1940, p. 10). It later dropped out of scholarly mention. After 1800, the Chinese were able to recover the works of Zhu Shijie, a Chinese mathematician and writer of the Yuan Dynasty, partly from Korean sources.

The development of algebra in Japan started a little later, sometime between 1300 and 1600. Seki Takakazu, also known as Seki Kowa, developed algebra during the Edo period in Japan. It seems that the Japanese were influenced by the Chinese, who developed algebra through stimulus diffusion themselves.

3. Monasticism

It is believed that the practice of monasticism – living a quiet, separate, religious life through self-imposed segregation – spread from Buddhism to other religions and changed its flavor in each religious tradition.

Monasticism is an institutionalized religious practice or movement. Monastics attempt to live by a rule that requires separation from society and celibacy.

Monastic individuals usually separate themselves from society by living as hermits, anchorites, or members of an ascetic community.

The term monasticism can denote practices in Buddhism, Christianity, Jainism, Daoism, and other religions (Bharati & Johnston, 2022).

Ascetic communities developed in India. In the west, monastic communities appeared in Palestine in about 150 BCE.

Christian monastic organizations became prominent in fourth-century Egypt. The connections of space and time are such that some amount of stimulus diffusion is likely to have taken place (Kroeber, 1940, p. 13).

4. Kanji

Kanji refers to the adopted Chinese characters used in written Japanese.

The use of Chinese characters in Japan first began to take hold around the 5th century CE and has since influenced Japanese culture, language, literature, and history (Miyake, 2003). One individual, Wani, helped introduce Chinese characters into the Japanese language.

The adoption of Chinese characters gave Japan access to texts about science, religion, art, and philosophy. These characters have different pronunciations, and written Japanese also has other syllabic scripts.

Some have similar meanings, while others differ. So the use of Kanji in written Japanese is an example of stimulus diffusion.

5. French and English

The influence of French language on English language pertains to its vocabulary, syntax, grammar, orthography, and pronunciation.

Most of the French vocabulary in English entered the language after the Norman Conquest of England in 1066 when Old French became the language of the new Anglo-Norman court, the government, and the social elites. English continued to be influenced by the French language.

If you’ve ever tried to learn French as an English speaker, you would’ve recognized many of the words used, sometimes with slight modifications.

The influence of the French language was gradual. According to some scholars, this process never stopped (Baugh & Cable, 2002, p. 163).

Terms relating to government, social class, the church, law, war, fashion, food, and learning are all mostly borrowed from French.

These words and their pronunciations usually change slightly in English. The influence of French on English is an example of stimulus diffusion.

Other Cultural Diffusion Examples

Cultural diffusion (from Latin diffundere – “to pour out, to spread”) was first introduced in anthropology and sociology by the German ethnologist and archaeologist Leo Frobenius in his work Der westafrikanische Kulturkreis (Frobenius, 1897).

It refers to the spread of cultural items between individuals within a single culture or between different ones (Domosh et al., 2011, pp. 10-11).

Examples of diffusion include the spread of iron smelting in ancient times and the use of automobiles in the 20th century.

Anthropologists typically define three categories of diffusion mechanisms: (1) direct diffusion, (2) forced diffusion, and (3) indirect diffusion. The six major types of cultural diffusion are (1) expansion diffusion, (2) relocation diffusion, (3) hierarchical diffusion, (4) contagious diffusion, (5) stimulus diffusion, and (6) maladaptive diffusion.

Conclusion

Cultural diffusion denotes the spread of cultural items within or between cultures. Such items include ideas, styles, religions, technologies, languages, fashion, etc. Social scientists generally identify three mechanisms through which cultural diffusion happens and six types of cultural diffusion. Stimulus diffusion is a subcategory of cultural diffusion which occurs when a cultural item changes as it spreads to new areas.

References

Baugh, A. C., & Cable, T. (2002). A History of the English Language. Prentice Hall.

Domosh, M., Neumann, R. P., Americas Before 1492: An Encyclopedia of Visitors, Explorers, and Immigrants. ABC-CLIO.

Frobenius, L. (1897). Der westafrikanische Kulturkreis. Petermanns Mitteilungen.

Gaillard, G. (2004). The Routledge Dictionary of Anthropologists. Psychology Press.

Heidemann, F. (2011). Ethnologie: Eine Einführung (1. Aufl.). Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.

Price, P. L., & Jordan-Bychkov, T. G. (2011). The Human Mosaic: A Cultural Approach to Human Geography. W. H. Freeman.