Frantz Cynthia M, Cuddy Amy J C, Burnett Molly, Ray Heidi, Hart Allen
Oberlin College, Department of Psychology, OH, USA.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2004 Dec;30(12):1611-24. doi: 10.1177/0146167204266650.
Three experiments test whether the threat of appearing racist leads White participants to perform worse on the race Implicit Association Test (IAT) and whether self-affirmation can protect from this threat. Experiments 1 and 2 suggest that White participants show a stereotype threat effect when completing the race IAT, leading to stronger pro-White scores when the test is believed to be diagnostic of racism. This effect increases for domain-identified (highly motivated to control prejudice) participants (Experiment 2). In Experiment 3, self-affirmation inoculates participants against stereotype threat while taking the race IAT. These findings have methodological implications for use of the race IAT and theoretical implications concerning the malleability of automatic prejudice and the potential interpersonal effects of the fear of appearing racist.
三项实验检验了表现出种族主义的威胁是否会导致白人参与者在种族内隐联想测验(IAT)中表现更差,以及自我肯定是否能抵御这种威胁。实验1和实验2表明,白人参与者在完成种族IAT时表现出刻板印象威胁效应,当该测试被认为可诊断种族主义时,会导致更强的亲白人分数。对于领域认同者(有强烈动机控制偏见),这种效应会增强(实验2)。在实验3中,自我肯定使参与者在进行种族IAT时免受刻板印象威胁的影响。这些发现对种族IAT的使用具有方法学意义,对自动偏见的可塑性以及担心表现出种族主义的潜在人际影响具有理论意义。