Publication | Closed Access
Reducing Automatically Activated Racial Prejudice Through Implicit Evaluative Conditioning
353
Citations
55
References
2006
Year
Social IdentityBehavioral SciencesBehavioral Decision MakingUnconscious BiasBiasDiscriminationAfrican American StudiesRacial PrejudiceEthnic DiscriminationSocial SciencesEvaluative Priming MeasurePrejudicePublic HealthRacismConditioning ProcedurePsychologyDependent MeasureRace
The authors report a set of experiments that use an implicit evaluative conditioning procedure to reduce automatically activated racial prejudice in White participants in a short period and with relatively few trials. Experiment 1 demonstrated that participants were unaware of the repeated conditioned stimulus-unconditioned stimulus (CS-US) pairings of Black-good and White-bad. In Experiment 2, the procedure was found to be effective in reducing prejudice as indicated by an evaluative priming measure of automatically activated racial attitudes. In Experiment 3, this reduction in prejudice was found to persist throughout a 2-day separation between the conditioning procedure and the administration of the dependent measure. The implications of the present findings for the persistence of automatically activated racial prejudice are discussed.
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