Title of article
The role of skin color and facial physiognomy in racial categorization: Moderation by implicit racial attitudes
Author/Authors
Stepanova، نويسنده , , Elena V. and Strube، نويسنده , , Michael J، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
12
From page
867
To page
878
Abstract
Previous research has not sufficiently addressed factors that define and moderate racial categorization judgments. This study independently manipulated skin color and facial physiognomy to determine their relative weighting in racial categorization. Participants (N = 250) judged faces varying on 10 levels of facial physiognomy (from Afrocentric to Eurocentric) and 10 levels of skin color (from dark to light) under either no time constraints, a modest time constraint, and under a stringent time constraint. Skin color was a powerful predictor of racial typicality ratings at all levels of facial physiognomy, but participants relied upon facial physiognomy more when rating faces of light than dark skin color. Skin color was a more important cue than facial physiognomy under no time constraints, but as time constraints became more severe, skin colorʹs importance decreased, yet it remained a more important cue at extreme physiognomy levels. The relationship between skin color and racial typicality ratings was stronger for those with more negative implicit racial attitudes. These findings suggest the primary role of skin color in racial categorization and underscore the importance of implicit attitudes in explicit categorization judgments.
Keywords
Implicit racial attitude , Racial typicality , Skin Color , Facial physiognomy , Racial categorization
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1960536
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