School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Arizona State University.
School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Arizona State University.
Law Hum Behav. 2020 Apr;44(2):97-112. doi: 10.1037/lhb0000366. Epub 2020 Mar 12.
The police face great scrutiny after highly publicized instances of lethal force. Dash-camera footage ostensibly provides "objective" evidence of whether the force was excessive. We tested whether participants interpreted the same "objective" video of an officer exerting force differently based on the officer's gender and race.
We predicted that when (a) a male (vs. female) officer used force and (b) a Black (vs. White) officer used force, participants would endorse more internal and less external explanations for their use-of-force, which would be associated with less trust in and perceived effectiveness of the officer.
We randomly assigned Amazon's Mechanical Turk workers (N = 452; 53% female, 80% White) to (a) see a segment of a police-civilian interaction video that either included or did not include exertion of force, and to believe that the officer was (b) male versus female, and (c) Black versus White. They reported their trust in the officer and perceptions of the officer's effectiveness, and their degree of agreement with external and internal attributions for the officer's behavior.
When officers used force, people trusted officers less (d = 1.13) and perceived them to be less effective (d = .78) relative to when they did not. Despite all participants viewing the same interaction, people who thought they saw a male (vs. female) officer perceived his use-of-force to be driven more by internal traits, such as being aggressive and emotionally reactive, and less by the external situation, which was associated with decreased trust and perceived effectiveness. In contrast, people perceived female (vs. male) officers' force to be driven more by external aspects of the dangerous situation, which was associated with increased trust and perceived effectiveness. This pattern did not depend on the officers' race or participants' gender.
This constitutes a rare instance of women benefiting from violating gender stereotypes in the workplace because people assumed her counterstereotypical behavior was more justified by the situation and less about her being an aggressive and emotionally reactive person. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
在备受瞩目的致命武力事件发生后,警方面临着巨大的审查。行车记录仪的画面表面上提供了有关武力是否过度的“客观”证据。我们测试了参与者是否根据警察的性别和种族,对同一警官使用武力的“客观”视频有不同的解释。
我们预测,当(a)男性(而非女性)警察使用武力时,以及(b)黑人(而非白人)警察使用武力时,参与者会更多地从内部而不是外部为他们使用武力的行为寻找解释,这将与对警察的信任度降低和对警察的有效性的看法降低相关。
我们随机分配亚马逊的 Mechanical Turk 工人(N = 452;53%为女性,80%为白人),(a)观看一段包含或不包含武力的警察与平民互动视频片段,同时相信警察是(b)男性对女性,以及(c)黑人对白人。他们报告了对警察的信任度以及对警察的有效性的看法,以及对警察行为的外部和内部归因的认同程度。
当警察使用武力时,与他们不使用武力相比,人们对警察的信任度更低(d = 1.13),对警察的有效性的看法更低(d =.78)。尽管所有参与者都观看了相同的互动,但认为自己看到男警察(而非女警察)使用武力的人认为他的武力行为更多地受到内部特质的驱动,例如攻击性和情绪反应性,而较少受到外部情况的驱动,这与信任度降低和有效性降低有关。相比之下,人们认为女警察(而非男警察)使用武力更多地受到危险情况的外部因素的驱动,这与信任度和有效性的提高有关。这种模式与警察的种族或参与者的性别无关。
这是女性在工作场所违反性别刻板印象而受益的罕见情况,因为人们认为她的反刻板印象行为更多地是由情况决定的,而不是她是一个攻击性和情绪反应性强的人。(PsycInfo Database Record(c)2020 APA,保留所有权利)。