Centre for the Study of the Senses, School of Advanced Study, University of London, UK; Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, UK.
Centre for the Study of the Senses, School of Advanced Study, University of London, UK; Munich Center for Neuroscience, Ludwig-Maximilian University, Munich, Germany.
Conscious Cogn. 2020 Aug;83:102952. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2020.102952. Epub 2020 Jun 5.
Faces with typically African features are perceived as darker than they really are. We investigated how early in processing the bias emerges, whether participants are aware of it, and whether it can be altered by explicit instructions. We presented pairs of faces sequentially, manipulated the luminance and morphological features of each, and asked participants which was lighter, and how confident they were in their responses. In Experiment 1, pre-response mouse cursor trajectories showed that morphology affected motor output just as early as luminance did. Furthermore, participants were not slower to respond or less confident when morphological cues drove them to give a response that conflicted with the actual luminance of the faces. However, Experiment 2 showed that participants could be instructed to reduce their reliance on morphology, even at early stages of processing. All stimuli used, code to run the experiments reported, raw data, and analyses scripts and their outputs can be found at https://osf.io/brssn.
具有典型非洲特征的面孔会被感知为比实际更暗。我们研究了这种偏见在处理过程中出现的早期阶段,参与者是否意识到这一点,以及明确的指令是否可以改变这种偏见。我们依次呈现了一对面孔,对每个面孔的亮度和形态特征进行了操作,并要求参与者判断哪个更亮,以及他们对自己的回答有多自信。在实验 1 中,反应前鼠标光标轨迹显示,形态特征对运动输出的影响与亮度特征一样早。此外,当形态特征引导参与者给出与面孔实际亮度相冲突的反应时,他们的反应速度并不会变慢,也不会缺乏自信。然而,实验 2 表明,即使在处理的早期阶段,参与者也可以被指示减少对形态特征的依赖。所有使用的刺激、运行报告实验的代码、原始数据以及分析脚本及其输出都可以在 https://osf.io/brssn 上找到。