Publication | Open Access
Implicit Racial Attitudes Influence Perceived Emotional Intensity on Other-Race Faces
25
Citations
41
References
2014
Year
Implicit BiasesSocial PsychologyRacial PrejudiceSocial CategorizationWhite PeopleOther-race FacesSocial SciencesPsychologyAttitude TheoryEmotional ResponseRaceIntergroup RelationBiasAffective ComputingUnconscious BiasImplicit AttitudesSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheorySocial CognitionArtsEmotion
An ability to accurately perceive and evaluate out-group members' emotions plays a critical role in intergroup interactions. Here we showed that Chinese participants' implicit attitudes toward White people bias their perception and judgment of emotional intensity of White people's facial expressions such as anger, fear and sadness. We found that Chinese participants held pro-Chinese/anti-White implicit biases that were assessed in an evaluative implicit association test (IAT). Moreover, their implicit biases positively predicted the perceived intensity of White people's angry, fearful and sad facial expressions but not for happy expressions. This study demonstrates that implicit racial attitudes can influence perception and judgment of a range of emotional expressions. Implications for intergroup interactions were discussed.
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