Payne B Keith
Department of Psychology, Ohio State University, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2005 Oct;89(4):488-503. doi: 10.1037/0022-3514.89.4.488.
Two studies investigated the role of executive control in moderating the relationship between automatic stereotype activation and behavioral responses. Race bias in weapon identification was used to measure stereotyping, and a process dissociation procedure was used to measure automatic and controlled components of performance. In Experiment 1, the controlled component was shown to correlate with general attention control and race-specific motivations to control prejudice. Across multiple measures, automatic race bias was more likely to be expressed as behavioral discrimination among individuals with poor executive control. Experiment 2 found the same relationship between automatic and controlled components of behavior when predicting impressions of a Black individual. Executive control is discussed in the context of other control strategies in influential dual-process models of stereotyping.
两项研究调查了执行控制在调节自动刻板印象激活与行为反应之间关系中的作用。武器识别中的种族偏见被用于衡量刻板印象,并且采用了过程分离程序来衡量表现的自动和受控成分。在实验1中,受控成分被证明与一般注意力控制以及控制偏见的种族特异性动机相关。在多项测量中,自动种族偏见在执行控制较差的个体中更有可能表现为行为歧视。实验2在预测对一名黑人个体的印象时,发现了行为的自动和受控成分之间的相同关系。在有影响力的刻板印象双加工模型中,结合其他控制策略的背景对执行控制进行了讨论。