Department of Psychology, University of California, Riverside.
Department of Psychology, San Francisco State University.
J Exp Psychol Gen. 2023 Jun;152(6):1622-1638. doi: 10.1037/xge0001335. Epub 2023 Mar 6.
Racial stereotypes exert pernicious effects on decision-making and behavior, yet little is known about how stereotypes disrupt people's ability to learn new associations. The current research interrogates a fundamental question about the boundary conditions of probabilistic learning by examining whether and how learning is influenced by preexisting associations. Across three experiments, participants learned the probabilistic outcomes of different card combinations based on feedback in either a social (e.g., forecasting crime) or nonsocial (e.g., forecasting weather) learning context. During learning, participants were presented with either task-irrelevant social (i.e., Black or White faces) or nonsocial (i.e., darker or lighter clouds) stimuli that were stereotypically congruent or incongruent with the learning context. Participants exhibited learning disruptions in the social compared to nonsocial learning context, despite repeated instructions that the stimuli were unrelated to the outcome (Studies 1 and 2). We also found no differences in learning disruptions when participants learned in the presence of negatively (Black and criminal) or positively valenced stereotypes (Black and athletic; Study 3). Finally, we tested whether learning decrements were due to "first-order" stereotype application or inhibition at the trial level, or due to "second-order" cognitive load disruptions that accumulate across trials due to fears of appearing prejudiced (aggregated analysis). We found no evidence of first-order disruptions and instead found evidence for second-order disruptions: participants who were more internally motivated to respond without prejudice, and thus more likely to self-monitor their responses, learned less accurately over time. We discuss the implications of the influence of stereotypes on learning and memory. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
种族刻板印象对决策和行为产生了有害影响,但人们对刻板印象如何破坏人们学习新联想的能力知之甚少。当前的研究通过检查学习是否受到先前存在的联想的影响以及如何受到影响,探讨了概率学习边界条件的一个基本问题。在三项实验中,参与者根据反馈在社会(例如,预测犯罪)或非社会(例如,预测天气)学习环境中学习不同卡片组合的概率结果。在学习过程中,参与者会看到与任务无关的社会(即黑或白的面孔)或非社会(即更暗或更亮的云)刺激,这些刺激与学习环境的刻板印象一致或不一致。与非社会学习环境相比,参与者在社会学习环境中表现出学习障碍,尽管反复指示这些刺激与结果无关(研究 1 和 2)。当参与者在存在负面刻板印象(黑人和犯罪)或积极刻板印象(黑人和运动)的情况下学习时,我们也没有发现学习障碍的差异(研究 3)。最后,我们测试了学习减退是由于在试次层面上的“一阶”刻板印象应用或抑制,还是由于由于对表现出偏见的恐惧而在试次之间累积的“二阶”认知负荷干扰所致(聚合分析)。我们没有发现一阶干扰的证据,而是发现了二阶干扰的证据:那些更有内在动力不抱有偏见地做出反应,因此更有可能自我监控自己的反应的参与者,随着时间的推移,学习准确性越低。我们讨论了刻板印象对学习和记忆的影响的含义。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。