Hugenberg Kurt, Bodenhausen Galen V
Northwestern University, USA.
Psychol Sci. 2003 Nov;14(6):640-3. doi: 10.1046/j.0956-7976.2003.psci_1478.x.
We propose that social attitudes, and in particular implicit prejudice, bias people's perceptions of the facial emotion displayed by others. To test this hypothesis, we employed a facial emotion change-detection task in which European American participants detected the offset (Study 1) or onset (Study 2) of facial anger in both Black and White targets. Higher implicit (but not explicit) prejudice was associated with a greater readiness to perceive anger in Black faces, but neither explicit nor implicit prejudice predicted anger perceptions regarding similar White faces. This pattern indicates that European Americans high in implicit racial prejudice are biased to perceive threatening affect in Black but not White faces, suggesting that the deleterious effects of stereotypes may take hold extremely early in social interaction.
我们认为,社会态度,尤其是隐性偏见,会影响人们对他人面部表情所传达情感的认知。为了验证这一假设,我们进行了一项面部表情变化检测任务,让欧裔美国参与者检测黑人和白人面部愤怒表情的消失(研究1)或出现(研究2)。较高的隐性(而非显性)偏见与更易于将黑人面部视为愤怒表情相关,但显性和隐性偏见均无法预测对相似白人面部的愤怒认知。这种模式表明,隐性种族偏见较高的欧裔美国人倾向于将黑人面部视为具有威胁性的表情,而对白人面部则不然,这表明刻板印象的有害影响可能在社会互动的早期阶段就已显现。