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Solo status revisited: Examining racial group differences in the self-regulatory consequences of self-presenting as a racial solo
Authors:Sarah E. Johnson  Jennifer A. Richeson
Affiliation:a Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, 2029 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208, United States
b Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University, 2040 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208, United States
Abstract:The present study examined the impact of racial group membership on the self-regulatory consequences of self-presenting with racial solo status. Based on the strength model of self-regulation, we proposed that individuals who acquire more practice with solo status by virtue of their racial group membership, may find it less depleting relative to individuals with less practice. To examine this, White and racial minority (Black, Hispanic) students at a predominantly White university were asked to engage in a self-presentation task in which they were assigned either racial solo or nonsolo status. Persistence on a subsequent hidden objects task served as the measure of depletion. Results revealed an interaction between racial group membership and solo status. In particular, consistent with previous research, White participants were more depleted (i.e., persisted less) after self-presenting with solo (vs. nonsolo) status. Racial minority participants, however, were not similarly impaired by solo status. These results suggest that our social group memberships, by virtue of the experiences they typically confer, may play an important role in determining which social demands will be depleting for whom.
Keywords:Solo status   Token status   Cognitive depletion
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