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Close contact with racial outgroup members moderates attentional allocation towards outgroup versus ingroup faces
Some research has demonstrated that White perceivers direct more initial attention to Black relative to White target faces, while other work has failed to show this relationship. Several variables have been identified that moderate early attention to racial outgroup versus racial ingroup faces. In t...
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Published in: | Group processes & intergroup relations 2015-01, Vol.18 (1), p.76-88 |
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container_title | Group processes & intergroup relations |
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creator | Dickter, Cheryl L. Gagnon, Kyle T. Gyurovski, Ivo I. Brewington, B. Scott |
description | Some research has demonstrated that White perceivers direct more initial attention to Black relative to White target faces, while other work has failed to show this relationship. Several variables have been identified that moderate early attention to racial outgroup versus racial ingroup faces. In the current paper, two studies sought to extend this work by testing whether close contact with racial outgroup members moderates the amount of initial attention directed towards racial outgroup members relative to ingroup members using a dot-probe task. In Study 1, Whites’ attentional allocation to Black versus White faces was moderated by the amount of close and meaningful contact with Blacks. Study 2 extended these findings by demonstrating that Whites’ attentional allocation to Asian relative to White faces was moderated by close contact with Asians. These findings identify close outgroup contact as an additional moderating variable in the attentional capture of racial outgroup versus ingroup faces, for groups both associated and not associated with threat. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/1368430214527854 |
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source | International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Sociological Abstracts; SAGE |
subjects | Asia Asians Black White Relations Face Group dynamics In-group Intergroup Relations Out-groups Race Race relations Social psychology Studies Threat Whites |
title | Close contact with racial outgroup members moderates attentional allocation towards outgroup versus ingroup faces |
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