Cunningham William A, Johnson Marcia K, Raye Carol L, Chris Gatenby J, Gore John C, Banaji Mahzarin R
Department of Psychology, Yale University, USA.
Psychol Sci. 2004 Dec;15(12):806-13. doi: 10.1111/j.0956-7976.2004.00760.x.
In a study of the neural components of automatic and controlled social evaluation, White participants viewed Black and White faces during event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging. When the faces were presented for 30 ms, activation in the amygdala-a brain region associated with emotion-was greater for Black than for White faces. When the faces were presented for 525 ms, this difference was significantly reduced, and regions of frontal cortex associated with control and regulation showed greater activation for Black than White faces. Furthermore, greater race bias on an indirect behavioral measure was correlated with greater difference in amygdala activation between Black and White faces, and frontal activity predicted a reduction in Black-White differences in amygdala activity from the 30-ms to the 525-ms condition. These results provide evidence for neural distinctions between automatic and more controlled processing of social groups, and suggest that controlled processes may modulate automatic evaluation.
在一项关于自动和受控社会评价的神经成分的研究中,白人参与者在事件相关功能磁共振成像期间观看黑人和白人的面孔。当面孔呈现30毫秒时,与情绪相关的脑区杏仁核中,黑人面孔比白人面孔的激活程度更高。当面孔呈现525毫秒时,这种差异显著减小,与控制和调节相关的额叶皮层区域对黑人面孔的激活比对白人面孔的激活更大。此外,在一项间接行为测量中更大的种族偏见与黑人和白人面孔之间杏仁核激活的更大差异相关,并且额叶活动预测了从30毫秒到525毫秒条件下杏仁核活动中黑人和白人差异的减小。这些结果为社会群体的自动和更受控加工之间的神经差异提供了证据,并表明受控加工可能调节自动评价。