Publication | Closed Access
They don't all look alike: Individual impressions of other racial groups.
131
Citations
5
References
1993
Year
EthnicityCritical Race TheoryU.s. WhiteSocial PsychologyRacial PrejudiceEducationSocial CategorizationRacial StudyPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyRaceContemporary RacismAfrican American StudiesStereotypesRacial GroupEthnic StudiesMinority StudiesRacismUnconscious BiasIndividual ImpressionsSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesRacialization StudiesOther Racial GroupsEthnic IdentityAttractiveness Halo EffectSocial CognitionCultureU.s. BlackInterpersonal AttractionRace RelationSocial Diversity
Reliability, content, and homogeneity of own- and other-race impressions were assessed: U.S. White, U.S. Black, and Korean students rated faces of White, Black, or Korean men. High intraracial reliabilities revealed that people of 1 race showed equally high agreement regarding the traits of own- and other-race faces. Racially universal appearance stereotypes--the attractiveness halo effect and the babyface overgeneralization effect--contributed substantially to interracial agreement, which was only marginally lower than intraracial agreement. Moreover, similar attention to variations in appearance yielded similar degrees of own- and other-race trait differentiation. When own- and other-race differences in the differentiation of faces on babyfaceness were statistically controlled, differences in trait differentiation were eliminated. Despite the individuated impressions of other-race faces, certain racial stereotypes persisted.
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