Department of Psychology.
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences.
Dev Psychol. 2020 May;56(5):888-896. doi: 10.1037/dev0000905. Epub 2020 Jan 30.
Bilingual children have been shown to differ from monolingual children in several domains of human cognition. Comparatively few studies have investigated social-interactional processes in bilingual populations. Here, we investigated whether monolingual and bilingual children demonstrate similar susceptibility to an aspect of social functioning with broad societal reach: racial bias. We measured both implicit and explicit biases against African race individuals in 2 groups of monolingual preschoolers (native speakers of English or Chinese) and in 2 groups of English-Chinese bilingual preschoolers (tested in English or Chinese; total = 160). We found that monolingual children demonstrated greater implicit bias against African race individuals than bilingual children, independent of their native language. Monolingual Chinese children demonstrated greater explicit bias than bilingual children, although monolingual English children's explicit bias scores did not differ from those of bilingual children. Findings are discussed in terms of cognitive and experiential mechanisms that may link bilingualism and racial bias. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
双语儿童在人类认知的几个领域与单语儿童不同。相对较少的研究调查了双语人群中的社会互动过程。在这里,我们研究了单语和双语儿童是否表现出对具有广泛社会影响的社会功能方面的相似敏感性:种族偏见。我们在两组单语学龄前儿童(英语或汉语母语者)和两组英语-汉语双语学龄前儿童(用英语或汉语进行测试;总共 160 人)中测量了对非洲种族个体的内隐和外显偏见。我们发现,单语儿童对非洲种族个体的内隐偏见大于双语儿童,而与他们的母语无关。说汉语的单语儿童表现出比双语儿童更大的外显偏见,尽管说英语的单语儿童的外显偏见得分与双语儿童没有差异。研究结果从可能将双语与种族偏见联系起来的认知和经验机制方面进行了讨论。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2020 APA,保留所有权利)。