La Macchia Stephen T, Louis Winnifred R, Hornsey Matthew J, Thai Michael, Barlow Fiona Kate
The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia
The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2016 Jan;42(1):118-29. doi: 10.1177/0146167215616801.
The present research examines whether people use racial contact to signal positive and negative social attributes. In two experiments, participants were instructed to fake good (trustworthy/competent) or fake bad (untrustworthy/incompetent) when reporting their amount of contact with a range of different racial groups. In Experiment 1 (N = 364), participants faking good reported significantly more contact with White Americans than with non-White Americans, whereas participants faking bad did not. In Experiment 2 (N = 1,056), this pattern was replicated and was found to be particularly pronounced among those with stronger pro-White bias. These findings suggest that individuals may use racial contact as a social signal, effectively "whitewashing" their apparent contact and friendships when trying to present positively.
本研究考察了人们是否利用种族接触来传达积极和消极的社会属性。在两项实验中,参与者被要求在报告与一系列不同种族群体的接触程度时假装表现良好(值得信赖/有能力)或假装表现不佳(不值得信赖/无能力)。在实验1(N = 364)中,假装表现良好的参与者报告与美国白人的接触明显多于与非美国白人的接触,而假装表现不佳的参与者则不然。在实验2(N = 1,056)中,这一模式得到了重复,并且发现在那些有更强亲白人偏见的人当中尤为明显。这些发现表明,个体可能将种族接触用作一种社会信号,在试图展现积极形象时有效地“粉饰”他们表面上的接触和友谊。