Neblett Enrique W, Roberts Steven O
Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Psychophysiology. 2013 Oct;50(10):943-53. doi: 10.1111/psyp.12087. Epub 2013 Jul 28.
Several studies identify racial identity-the significance and meaning that individuals attribute to race-as a mitigating factor in the association between racial discrimination and adjustment. In this study, we employed a visual imagery paradigm to examine whether racial identity would moderate autonomic responses to blatant and subtle racial discrimination analogues with Black and White perpetrators. We recruited 105 African American young adults from a public, southeastern university in the United States. The personal significance of race as well as personal feelings about African Americans and feelings about how others view African Americans moderated autonomic responses to the vignettes. We use polyvagal theory and a stress, appraisal, and coping framework to interpret our results with an eye toward elucidating the ways in which racial identity may inform individual differences in physiological responses to racial discrimination.
多项研究将种族认同——个体赋予种族的重要性和意义——视为种族歧视与适应之间关联的一个缓解因素。在本研究中,我们采用视觉意象范式来检验种族认同是否会调节对黑人和白人实施者的公然和微妙种族歧视类似情境的自主反应。我们从美国东南部一所公立大学招募了105名非裔美国青年。种族的个人重要性以及对非裔美国人的个人感受和对他人如何看待非裔美国人的感受调节了对这些 vignettes 的自主反应。我们运用多元迷走神经理论以及压力、评估和应对框架来解释我们的结果,旨在阐明种族认同可能影响个体对种族歧视生理反应差异的方式。