experience one may have when moving to a cultural environment which is different from one's own
The encounter with the conquerors with steel and horses shocked the Aztecs, so they confused the Spaniards with prophets from the east. Traveler from Australia visiting a small farm in Sierra Leone Culture shock is an experience a person may have when moving to a cultural environment which is different from one's own; it is also the personal disorientation a person may feel when experiencing an unfamiliar way of life due to immigration or a visit to a new country, a move between social environments, or simply transition to another type of life. One of the most common causes of culture shock involves individuals in a foreign environment. Culture shock can be described as consisting of at least one of four distinct phases: honeymoon, negotiation, adjustment, and adaptation.
Common problems include: information overload, language barrier, generation gap, technology gap, skill interdependence, formulation dependency, homesickness (cultural), boredom (job dependency), ethnicity, race, skin color, response ability (cultural skill set). There is no true way to entirely prevent culture shock, as individuals in any society are personally affected by cultural contrasts differently.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).