Pickett Robert E M, Saperstein Aliya, Penner Andrew M
New York University, New York, NY, USA.
Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
Soc Forces. 2022 Nov 11;102(1):23-44. doi: 10.1093/sf/soac115. eCollection 2023 Sep.
Previous research has established that people shift their identities situationally and may come to subconsciously mirror one another. We explore this phenomenon among survey interviewers in the 2004-2018 General Social Survey by drawing on repeated measures of racial identification collected after each interview. We find not only that interviewers self-identify differently over time but also that their response changes cannot be fully explained by several measurement-error related expectations, either random or systematic. Rather, interviewers are significantly more likely to identify their race in ways that align with respondents' reports. The potential for affiliative identification, even if subconscious, has a range of implications for understanding race-of-interviewer effects, the social construction of homophily, and for how we consider causality in studies of race and racial inequality more broadly.
先前的研究已经证实,人们会根据情境改变自己的身份认同,并且可能会下意识地相互模仿。我们利用2004年至2018年《综合社会调查》中对调查访谈员的重复测量数据,通过每次访谈后收集的种族认同重复测量数据,来探究这一现象。我们发现,不仅访谈员的自我认同会随时间而变化,而且他们的回答变化无法完全由几种与测量误差相关的预期来解释,无论是随机的还是系统的。相反,访谈员以与受访者报告一致的方式识别自己种族的可能性要大得多。亲和认同的可能性,即使是潜意识的,对于理解访谈员种族效应、同质性的社会建构,以及更广泛地理解我们在种族和种族不平等研究中如何考虑因果关系,都有一系列的影响。