Klein Samuel A W, Todd Andrew R
Department of Psychology, University of California, Davis, CA, USA.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2024 Dec;31(6):2767-2775. doi: 10.3758/s13423-024-02526-z. Epub 2024 May 20.
Racial stereotypes are commonly activated by informational cues that are detectable in people's faces. Here, we used a sequential priming task to examine whether and how the salience of emotion (angry/scowling vs. happy/smiling expressions) or apparent race (Black vs. White) information in male face primes shapes racially biased weapon identification (gun vs. tool) decisions. In two experiments (N = 546) using two different manipulations of facial information salience, racial bias in weapon identification was weaker when the salience of emotion expression versus race was heightened. Using diffusion decision modeling, we tested competing accounts of the cognitive mechanism by which the salience of facial information moderates this behavioral effect. Consistent support emerged for an initial bias account, whereby the decision process began closer to the "gun" response upon seeing faces of Black versus White men, and this racially biased shift in the starting position was weaker when emotion versus race information was salient. We discuss these results vis-à-vis prior empirical and theoretical work on how facial information salience moderates racial bias in decision-making.
种族刻板印象通常会被人们面部可察觉的信息线索所激活。在此,我们使用了一个序列启动任务来检验男性面部启动刺激中情绪(愤怒/皱眉与开心/微笑表情)或明显种族(黑人与白人)信息的显著性是否以及如何塑造种族偏见的武器识别(枪与工具)决策。在两项实验(N = 546)中,我们采用了两种不同的面部信息显著性操纵方法,当情绪表达的显著性相对于种族被提高时,武器识别中的种族偏见会减弱。使用扩散决策模型,我们测试了面部信息显著性调节这种行为效应的认知机制的不同解释。对于初始偏见解释出现了一致的支持,即决策过程在看到黑人男性与白人男性的面孔时,开始更接近“枪”的反应,并且当情绪信息相对于种族信息显著时,这种起始位置的种族偏见性转移会减弱。我们结合先前关于面部信息显著性如何调节决策中的种族偏见的实证和理论研究来讨论这些结果。