The World Is Not Black and White: Racial Bias in the Decision to Shoot in a Multiethnic Context

We examined implicit race biases in the decision to shoot potentially hostile targets in a multiethnic context. Results of two studies showed that college-aged participants and police officers showed anti-Black racial bias in their response times: they were quicker to correctly shoot armed Black targets and to indicate “don't shoot” for unarmed Latino, Asian, and White targets. In addition, police officers showed racial biases in response times toward Latinos versus Asians or Whites, and surprisingly, toward Whites versus Asians. Results also showed that the accuracy of decisions to shoot was higher for Black and Latino targets than for White and Asian targets. Finally, the degree of bias shown by police officers toward Blacks was related to contact, attitudes, and stereotypes. Overestimation of community violent crime correlated with greater bias toward Latinos but less toward Whites. Implications for police training to ameliorate biases are discussed.

[1]  R. Parker Poverty, Subculture of Violence, and Type of Homicide , 1989 .

[2]  A. Baird,et al.  Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective Attention. , 2008, Journal of experimental social psychology.

[3]  Joshua Correll,et al.  Event-related potentials and the decision to shoot: The role of threat perception and cognitive control , 2006 .

[4]  S. Cureton An empirical test of the social threat phenomenon: Using 1990 census and uniform crime reports , 2001 .

[5]  C. Judd,et al.  The police officer's dilemma: using ethnicity to disambiguate potentially threatening individuals. , 2002, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[6]  E. Plant,et al.  The Correlates of Law Enforcement Officers' Automatic and Controlled Race-Based Responses to Criminal Suspects , 2006 .

[7]  Stephen D. Mastrofski,et al.  Suspect disrespect toward the police , 2004 .

[8]  Arnold Binder,et al.  Police officer decisionmaking in potentially violent confrontations , 1992 .

[9]  Joshua Correll,et al.  Danger stereotypes predict racially biased attentional allocation , 2008 .

[10]  P. Gollwitzer,et al.  Reducing the Expression of Implicit Stereotypes: Reflexive Control Through Implementation Intentions , 2010, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[11]  R. Martínez Incorporating Latinos and immigrants into policing research , 2007 .

[12]  E. Borgida,et al.  Intergroup Disparities and Implicit Bias: A Commentary , 2012 .

[13]  Jane Stout,et al.  Contemporary Discrimination in the Lab and Field: Benefits and Obstacles of Full‐Cycle Social Psychology , 2012 .

[14]  Matthew Flatt,et al.  PsyScope: An interactive graphic system for designing and controlling experiments in the psychology laboratory using Macintosh computers , 1993 .

[15]  Arnold Binder,et al.  The Violent Police-Citizen Encounter , 1980 .

[16]  The Missing Quadrants of Antidiscrimination: Going Beyond the “Prejudice Polygraph” , 2012 .

[17]  Janet L. Starkes,et al.  A new training approach to complex decision making for police officers in potentially dangerous interventions , 1999 .

[18]  William A. Geller Deadly force: What we know. , 1982 .

[19]  P. Lejins Uniform Crime Reports , 1966 .

[20]  Robert J. Sampson,et al.  Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Crime and Criminal Justice in the United States , 1997, Crime and Justice.

[21]  C. Judd,et al.  Across the thin blue line: police officers and racial bias in the decision to shoot. , 2007, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[22]  Robert B. Cialdini,et al.  Full-cycle social psychology. , 1980 .

[23]  L. Hannon,et al.  Race, victim precipitated homicide, and the subculture of violence thesis , 2004 .

[24]  M. Holmes MINORITY THREAT AND POLICE BRUTALITY: DETERMINANTS OF CIVIL RIGHTS CRIMINAL COMPLAINTS IN U.S. MUNICIPALITIES , 2000 .

[25]  C. Judd,et al.  Evidence for racial prejudice at the implicit level and its relationship with questionnaire measures. , 1997, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[26]  Robert Rosenthal,et al.  Definition and Interpretation of Interaction Effects , 2001 .

[27]  E. Plant,et al.  The Consequences of Race for Police Officers' Responses to Criminal Suspects , 2005, Psychological science.

[28]  H. Albrecht Ethnic Minorities, Crime, and Criminal Justice in Germany , 1997, Crime and Justice.

[29]  P. Nieuwbeerta,et al.  SENTENCING HOMICIDE OFFENDERS IN THE NETHERLANDS: OFFENDER, VICTIM, AND SITUATIONAL INFLUENCES IN CRIMINAL PUNISHMENT† , 2010 .

[30]  M. Dwayne Smith,et al.  Variations in Correlates of Race-Specific Urban Homicide Rates* , 1992 .

[31]  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.

[32]  Lauren J. Krivo,et al.  Macrostructural Analyses of Race, Ethnicity, and Violent Crime: Recent Lessons and New Directions for Research , 2005 .

[33]  John M. MacDonald,et al.  The Temporal Relationship Between Police Killings of Civilians and Criminal Homicide: A Refined Version of the Danger-Perception Theory , 2001 .