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When your friends matter: The effect of White students' racial friendship networks on meta-perceptions and perceived identity contingencies
Authors:Daryl A. Wout  Mary C. Murphy  Claude M. Steele
Affiliation:aJohn Jay College-City University of New York, New York, NY, United States;bUniversity of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States;cColumbia University, New York, NY, United States
Abstract:Prior research suggests that people expect to be perceived negatively in interracial interactions but positively in intraracial interactions. The present research demonstrates that an interaction partner's racial network of friends can moderate these expectations in interracial interactions but not intraracial interactions. Across two experiments, we led Black and White college students to believe they would have conversation with a White student on campus. The results revealed that Black students expected to be perceived more positively and anticipated a less challenging conversation, when their interaction partner had a racially diverse network of friends compared to a racially homogeneous network of friends. In contrast, White students expected to be perceived positively and anticipated few challenges in the conversation, regardless of their interaction partner's racial network of friends. The implications of racial friendship diversity are discussed.
Keywords:Interracial friendships   Intraracial friendships   Meta-perceptions   Perceived identity contingencies   Stigma   Blacks
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