I think there's a lot of variables involved there that can't be isolated from each other easily. Culture is as important as language, and culture informs and shapes language. The example with Indonesian lack of time-markers (I'm assuming the language was Bahasa Indoneisan) is interesting, but it begs the question: do they lack time recognition because they don't use time-words, or do they lack time-words because they lack recognition? There are a number of Native American languages which have only vague words for time-markers, and their associated cultures do not regard time and punctuality in the same regard as Western culture. But does A cause B, or B cause A, or are they (most likely) interrelated. There's also a certain amount of ethnocentrist assumptions inherent in the question. Inuit researchers might well ask, "Do English speakers fail to recognize differences in the types of snow because they only have one word for it, or do they only have one word because they don't see the differences?"
A more telling experiment would be to compare English speakers from different cultures where English is the primary language (say, the US, Liberia, Australia and Scotland) and look for differences of perception. In that case, the differences are not linguistically derived, but cultural.
And of course, the old Sapir-Whorf hypothesis and "color naming" research dates back to the 1950s. And the framing research with the Super Bowl bit...that's not linguistics, it's classic social science. Political scientists have known this forever.