Phelps E A, O'Connor K J, Cunningham W A, Funayama E S, Gatenby J C, Gore J C, Banaji M R
New York University, NY, USA.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2000 Sep;12(5):729-38. doi: 10.1162/089892900562552.
We used fMRI to explore the neural substrates involved in the unconscious evaluation of Black and White social groups. Specifically, we focused on the amygdala, a subcortical structure known to play a role in emotional learning and evaluation. In Experiment 1, White American subjects observed faces of unfamiliar Black and White males. The strength of amygdala activation to Black-versus-White faces was correlated with two indirect (unconscious) measures of race evaluation (Implicit Association Test [IAT] and potentiated startle), but not with the direct (conscious) expression of race attitudes. In Experiment 2, these patterns were not obtained when the stimulus faces belonged to familiar and positively regarded Black and White individuals. Together, these results suggest that amygdala and behavioral responses to Black-versus-White faces in White subjects reflect cultural evaluations of social groups modified by individual experience.
我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来探究参与对黑人和白人社会群体进行无意识评估的神经基础。具体而言,我们聚焦于杏仁核,这是一种已知在情绪学习和评估中发挥作用的皮质下结构。在实验1中,美国白人受试者观察不熟悉的黑人和白人男性的面孔。杏仁核对黑人与白人面孔激活的强度与两种间接(无意识)的种族评估测量方法(内隐联想测验[IAT]和惊吓增强)相关,但与种族态度的直接(有意识)表达无关。在实验2中,当刺激面孔属于熟悉且受到正面看待的黑人和白人个体时,未得到这些模式。总之,这些结果表明,白人受试者对黑人和白人面孔的杏仁核及行为反应反映了受个体经历影响的对社会群体的文化评估。