Ruba Ashley L, McMurty Ryan, Gaither Sarah E, Wilbourn Makeba Parramore
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin - Madison, Waisman Center 399, 1500 Highland Avenue, Madison, WI 53705 USA.
Duke University, Durham, NC USA.
Affect Sci. 2022 Apr 1;3(1):21-33. doi: 10.1007/s42761-022-00111-y. eCollection 2022 Mar.
For decades, affective scientists have examined how adults and children reason about others' emotions. Yet, our knowledge is limited regarding how emotion reasoning is impacted by race-that is, how individuals reason about emotions displayed by people of other racial groups. In this review, we examine the developmental origins of racial biases in emotion reasoning, focusing on how White Americans reason about emotions displayed by Black faces/people. We highlight how racial biases in emotion reasoning, which emerge as early as infancy, likely contribute to miscommunications, inaccurate social perceptions, and negative interracial interactions across the lifespan. We conclude by discussing promising interventions to reduce these biases as well as future research directions, highlighting how affective scientists can decenter Whiteness in their research designs. Together, this review highlights how emotion reasoning is a potentially affective component of racial bias among White Americans.
几十年来,情感科学家一直在研究成年人和儿童如何推断他人的情绪。然而,我们对于情绪推理如何受到种族影响的了解有限——也就是说,个体如何推断其他种族群体的人所表现出的情绪。在这篇综述中,我们考察了情绪推理中种族偏见的发展起源,重点关注美国白人如何推断黑人面孔/黑人所表现出的情绪。我们强调,早在婴儿期就出现的情绪推理中的种族偏见,可能会在整个生命周期中导致沟通不畅、不准确的社会认知以及负面的跨种族互动。我们通过讨论减少这些偏见的有前景的干预措施以及未来的研究方向来结束本文,强调情感科学家如何在其研究设计中使白人中心地位非中心化。总之,这篇综述突出了情绪推理是美国白人种族偏见中一个潜在的情感组成部分。