University of Notre Dame, 118 Haggar Hall, Department of Psychology, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA.
J Soc Psychol. 2010 May-Jun;150(3):258-77. doi: 10.1080/00224540903365398.
In situations that are ambiguous with regard to the presence of discrimination, how do people arrive at their conclusions that discrimination has (or has not) taken place? This question was examined from a motivated social cognition perspective via the interaction of two factors: the prototype effect--the notion that ambiguously discriminatory behavior is more likely to be perceived as discriminatory when the executor is prototypical and the need for cognitive closure--the tendency to jump hastily to and seize on an answer. Results provided replicating evidence of the prototype effect among European American participants but not among African American participants. Specifically, European Americans were likely to perceive ambiguously racist behavior enacted by a prototypical executor (i.e., a White person) as more discriminatory than the same behavior exhibited by a non-prototypical executor (i.e., a Black person). African American participants, on the other hand, showed no reliance on this simple cognitive heuristic. Furthermore, results showed that European Americans with a higher need for cognitive closure were more likely to rely on the easy-to-use information offered by prototypes. These findings are discussed from a motivated social cognition perspective.
在存在歧视的情况并不明确的情况下,人们如何得出歧视已经(或尚未)发生的结论?从动机社会认知的角度来看,这个问题受到两个因素的相互作用的影响:原型效应——即当执行者具有代表性时,模棱两可的歧视行为更有可能被视为歧视;认知封闭的需求——即急于仓促地得出并抓住答案的倾向。研究结果为欧洲裔美国参与者提供了原型效应的复制证据,但没有为非洲裔美国参与者提供证据。具体来说,欧洲裔美国人更有可能将一个典型执行者(即白人)实施的模棱两可的种族主义行为视为更具歧视性,而不是同一行为由非典型执行者(即黑人)表现出来。另一方面,非洲裔美国参与者则没有依赖这种简单的认知启发式。此外,研究结果表明,认知封闭需求较高的欧洲裔美国人更有可能依赖原型提供的易于使用的信息。这些发现从动机社会认知的角度进行了讨论。