Contextual Variation in Automatic Evaluative Bias to Racially-Ambiguous Faces |
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Authors: | Ito Tiffany A Willadsen-Jensen Eve C Kaye Jesse T Park Bernadette |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA |
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Abstract: | Three studies examined the implicit evaluative associations activated by racially-ambiguous Black-White faces. In the context of both Black and White faces, Study 1 revealed a graded pattern of bias against racially-ambiguous faces that was weaker than the bias to Black faces but stronger than that to White faces. Study 2 showed that significant bias was present when racially-ambiguous faces appeared in the context of only White faces, but not in the context of only Black faces. Study 3 demonstrated that context produces perceptual contrast effects on racial-prototypicality judgments. Racially-ambiguous faces were perceived as more prototypically Black in a White-only than mixed-race context, and less prototypically Black in a Black-only context. Conversely, they were seen as more prototypically White in a Black-only than mixed context, and less prototypically White in a White-only context. The studies suggest that both race-related featural properties within a face (i.e., racial ambiguity) and external contextual factors affect automatic evaluative associations. |
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Keywords: | Multiracial faces Racial bias Implicit bias |
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