The effect of stereotypical primes on the neural processing of racially ambiguous faces

Previous research has demonstrated that an early attentional component of the event-related potential (ERP), the P2, is sensitive to the distinction between the processing of racial outgroup and ingroup faces but may not be sensitive to the distinction between racially ambiguous and ingroup faces. Recent behavioral work, however, has suggested that contextual information may affect the processing of racially ambiguous faces. Thus, the first goal of this study was to examine whether the early neural processing of racially ambiguous faces would be affected by primed stereotypes. White college student participants (n = 29) completed a task in which they racially categorized monoracial Black and White faces and racially ambiguous Black–White morphs. These faces were preceded by positive and negative Black and White stereotypical primes. Results indicated that P2 amplitude to the racially ambiguous faces was moderated by the valence of the primes such that negative primes led to greater neural processing of the racially ambiguous faces than positive primes. Furthermore, the extent to which P2 amplitude was affected by prime valence was moderated by individual differences in preference for structure and categorical thinking, as well as comfort with ambiguity.

[1]  T. Sejnowski,et al.  Removing electroencephalographic artifacts by blind source separation. , 2000, Psychophysiology.

[2]  G. Bodenhausen,et al.  Black + White = Black , 2008, Psychological science.

[3]  V. Yzerbyt,et al.  The Ingroup Overexclusion Effect - Impact of Valence and Confirmation On Stereotypical Information Search , 1992 .

[4]  V. C. Joe,et al.  The relationship of conservatism and cognitive-complexity , 1997 .

[5]  Steven L. Neuberg,et al.  A Continuum of Impression Formation, from Category-Based to Individuating Processes: Influences of Information and Motivation on Attention and Interpretation , 1990 .

[6]  Cheryl L. Dickter The effects of stereotypical cues on the social categorization and judgment of ambiguous-race targets , 2011 .

[7]  M. P. Root The Multiracial Experience: Racial Borders as the New Frontier , 1995 .

[8]  Marilynn B. Brewer,et al.  Category-based vs. Person-based Perception in Intergroup Contexts , 1998 .

[9]  A. Kruglanski,et al.  Motivated resistance and openness to persuasion in the presence or absence of prior information. , 1993, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[10]  H. AndresMartinM.D.M.P. Interracial Intimacies: Sex, Marriage, Identity, and Adoption , 2004 .

[11]  C. Macrae,et al.  Social cognition: thinking categorically about others. , 2000, Annual review of psychology.

[12]  William A. Cunningham,et al.  The Neural Substrates of In-Group Bias , 2008, Psychological science.

[13]  Joan Y. Chiao,et al.  Differential responses in the fusiform region to same-race and other-race faces , 2001, Nature Neuroscience.

[14]  Harold Sigall,et al.  Current Stereotypes: A Little Fading, a Little Faking. , 1971 .

[15]  Shelly Chaiken,et al.  Accuracy motivation attenuates covert priming: The systematic reprocessing of social information. , 1994 .

[16]  T. Ito,et al.  Race and gender on the brain: electrocortical measures of attention to the race and gender of multiply categorizable individuals. , 2003, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[17]  T. Ito,et al.  Ambiguity and the Timecourse of Racial Perception , 2006 .

[18]  T. Ito,et al.  A Foot in Both Worlds: Asian Americans' Perceptions of Asian, White, and Racially Ambiguous Faces , 2008 .

[19]  Otto H. MacLin,et al.  Racial categorization of faces: The ambiguous race face effect. , 2001 .

[20]  Arie W. Kruglanski,et al.  Need for Closure and the Social Response to Terrorism , 2010 .

[21]  Daniel T Levin,et al.  Evidence for hypodescent and racial hierarchy in the categorization and perception of biracial individuals. , 2011, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[22]  T. Ito,et al.  Contextual Variation in Automatic Evaluative Bias to Racially-Ambiguous Faces. , 2011, Journal of experimental social psychology.

[23]  A. Kruglanski,et al.  The freezing and unfreezing of lay-inferences: Effects on impressional primacy, ethnic stereotyping, and numerical anchoring ☆ , 1983 .

[24]  G. Bodenhausen,et al.  Social Categorization and Stereotyping In vivo: The VUCA Challenge , 2009 .

[25]  D. Levin Race as a visual feature: using visual search and perceptual discrimination tasks to understand face categories and the cross-race recognition deficit. , 2000, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[26]  J. Decety,et al.  The Oxford handbook of social neuroscience , 2011 .

[27]  J. B. Mcconahay Modern Racism and Modern Discrimination , 1983 .

[28]  T. Ito,et al.  The influence of processing objectives on the perception of faces: An ERP study of race and gender perception , 2005, Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience.

[29]  A. Kruglanski,et al.  Membership has its (epistemic) rewards: need for closure effects on in-group bias. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[30]  Kurt Hugenberg,et al.  Ambiguity in Social Categorization , 2004, Psychological science.

[31]  J. Dovidio,et al.  The subtlety of White racism, arousal, and helping behavior. , 1977 .

[32]  Cheryl L. Dickter,et al.  The effects of expectancy violations on early attention to race in an impression-formation paradigm , 2012, Social neuroscience.

[33]  A. Kruglanski,et al.  Individual differences in need for cognitive closure. , 1994, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[34]  B. Duncan,et al.  Differential social perception and attribution of intergroup violence: testing the lower limits of sterotyping of blacks. , 1976, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[35]  Cheryl L. Dickter,et al.  Racial ingroup and outgroup attention biases revealed by event-related brain potentials. , 2007, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.

[36]  Otto H. MacLin,et al.  The Role of Racial Markers in Race Perception and Racial Categorization , 2010 .

[37]  D. Levin CLASSIFYING FACES BY RACE : THE STRUCTURE OF FACE CATEGORIES , 1996 .

[38]  B. Altemeyer,et al.  Enemies of Freedom: Understanding Right-Wing Authoritarianism , 1988 .

[39]  A. Kruglanski,et al.  Motivated closing of the mind: "seizing" and "freezing". , 1996, Psychological review.

[40]  Dana Ward,et al.  Right-Wing Authoritarianism , 1982 .

[41]  E. Donnerstein,et al.  Variables in interracial aggression: anonymity, expected retaliation, and a riot. , 1972, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[42]  C. Frith Social cognition , 2008, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.