Are Black Women and Girls Associated With Danger? Implicit Racial Bias at the Intersection of Target Age and Gender
Autor: | Rebecca Neel, Andrew R. Todd, Kelsey C. Thiem, Austin J. Simpson |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Adolescent Social Psychology Sexism Poison control 050109 social psychology Suicide prevention 050105 experimental psychology Occupational safety and health Developmental psychology Ageism Race (biology) Young Adult process dissociation procedure Racism Injury prevention stereotyping Humans Psychology 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences racial bias Intersectionality Stereotyping 05 social sciences Human factors and ergonomics Black or African American implicit social cognition Racial bias Female Cognitive Sciences Social psychology intersectionality |
Zdroj: | Personality & social psychology bulletin, vol 45, iss 10 Thiem, Kelsey C; Neel, Rebecca; Simpson, Austin J; & Todd, Andrew R. (2019). Are Black Women and Girls Associated With Danger? Implicit Racial Bias at the Intersection of Target Age and Gender. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 014616721982918-014616721982918. doi: 10.1177/0146167219829182. UC Davis: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/6wb311qt |
Popis: | © 2019 by the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc. We investigated whether stereotypes linking Black men and Black boys with violence and criminality generalize to Black women and Black girls. In Experiments 1 and 2, non-Black participants completed sequential-priming tasks wherein they saw faces varying in race, age, and gender before categorizing danger-related objects or words. Experiment 3 compared task performance across non-Black and Black participants. Results revealed that (a) implicit stereotyping of Blacks as more dangerous than Whites emerged across target age, target gender, and perceiver race, with (b) a similar magnitude of racial bias across adult and child targets and (c) a smaller magnitude for female than male targets. Evidence for age bias and gender bias also emerged whereby (d) across race, adult targets were more strongly associated with danger than were child targets, and (e) within Black (but not White) targets, male targets were more strongly associated with danger than were female targets. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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