| Literature DB >> 34735659 |
Benjamin Uel Marsh1, Deborah Revenaugh2, Taylor Weeks2, Hyun Seo Lee2.
Abstract
Two experiments assessed how racial ambiguity and racial salience moderates the cross-race effect (CRE). In experiment 1, White and Black participants studied and identified the race of Asian, Black, Latino, and White faces that varied in ethnic typicality (high or low ET). For White participants, the CRE was larger when comparing high-ET White faces to high-ET other-race faces than low-ET other-race faces. Black participants showed a similar CRE reduction by ethnic typicality, but also showed a less prevalent CRE than White participants. Experiment 2 replicated experiment 1 procedures, but without the race identification task and only with White participants. Experiment 2 findings were comparable to experiment 1. Furthermore, experiment 2 showed a noticeably smaller CRE on Black faces than experiment 1, eliciting questions about increased racial salience amplifying the CRE. Results' general implications and the conceptual roots that indirectly link the CRE and racism will be discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Cross-race effect; Other-race effect; Racial ambiguity; Racial categorization; Racism
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34735659 PMCID: PMC8568751 DOI: 10.1186/s41235-021-00340-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Res Princ Implic ISSN: 2365-7464
Participants’ mean (standard devation) proportion of faces racially categorized accurately by racial/ethnic group and ethnic typicality
| Race of face | Ethnic typicality | Participants | |
|---|---|---|---|
| White | Black | ||
| Asian | High | .982 | .965 |
| Low | .363 | .478 | |
| Black | High | .997 | .995 |
| Low | .544 | .525 | |
| Latino | High | .805 | .715 |
| Low | .187 | .245 | |
| White | High | 1.00 | .995 |
| Low | .464 | .418 | |
Participants’ mean (standard devation) racial exposure ratings for Asian, Black, Latino, and White individuals by Experiment
| Racial Group | Experiment 1 | Experiment 2 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Participants | |||
| Black | White | White | |
| Asian | 2.98 | 4.00 | 3.97 |
| Black | 4.88 | 3.96 | 3.83 |
| Latino | 4.10 | 4.55 | 4.42 |
| White | 4.69 | 5.30 | 5.41 |
Fig. 1Mean recognition accuracy for each face type with 95% confidence intervals, by participant and experiment. Note: *p > .0167 & < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001
Fig. 2Effect size by CRE comparison, participant and experiment. Error bars are standard errors