Can singular examples change implicit racial attitudes in the real-world?

Implicit attitudes about social groups persist independently of explicit beliefs and can influence not only social behavior, but also medical and legal practices. Although examples presented in the laboratory can alter such implicit attitudes, it is unclear whether the same influence is exerted by r...

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Main Authors: Leslie E. Roos, Sophie eLebrecht, James W. Tanaka, Michael J. Tarr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00594/full
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spelling doaj-5c31924a3ef640c6a16d5a36097bc9c22020-11-24T23:05:05ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782013-09-01410.3389/fpsyg.2013.0059447434Can singular examples change implicit racial attitudes in the real-world?Leslie E. Roos0Leslie E. Roos1Sophie eLebrecht2Sophie eLebrecht3James W. Tanaka4Michael J. Tarr5Michael J. Tarr6University of OregonBrown UniversityCarnegie Mellon UniversityBrown UniversityUniversity of VictoriaCarnegie Mellon UniversityCarnegie Mellon UniversityImplicit attitudes about social groups persist independently of explicit beliefs and can influence not only social behavior, but also medical and legal practices. Although examples presented in the laboratory can alter such implicit attitudes, it is unclear whether the same influence is exerted by real-world exemplars. Following the 2008 US election, Plant et al. reported that the Implicit Association Test or IAT revealed a decrease in negative implicit attitudes towards African-Americans. However, a large-scale study also employing the IAT found little evidence for a change in implicit attitudes pre- and post-election. Here we present evidence that the 2008 US election may have facilitated at least a temporary change in implicit racial attitudes in the US. Our results rely on the Affective Lexical Priming Score or ALPS and pre- and post-election measurements for both US and non-US participants. US students who, pre-election, exhibited negative associations with black faces, post-election showed positive associations with black faces. Canadian students pre- and post-election did not show a similar shift. To account for these findings, we posit that the socio-cognitive processes underlying ALPS are different from those underlying the IAT. Acknowledging that we cannot form a causal link between an intervening real-world event and laboratory-measured implicit attitudes, we speculate that our findings may be driven by the fact that the 2008 election campaign included extremely positive media coverage of President Obama and prominently featured his face in association with positive words – similar to the structure of ALPS. Even so, our real-world finding adds to the literature demonstrating the malleability of implicit attitudes and has implications for how we understand the socio-cognitive mechanisms underlying stereotypes.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00594/fullface processingAffective Primingaffective valenceother-race effectimplicit attitudes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leslie E. Roos
Leslie E. Roos
Sophie eLebrecht
Sophie eLebrecht
James W. Tanaka
Michael J. Tarr
Michael J. Tarr
spellingShingle Leslie E. Roos
Leslie E. Roos
Sophie eLebrecht
Sophie eLebrecht
James W. Tanaka
Michael J. Tarr
Michael J. Tarr
Can singular examples change implicit racial attitudes in the real-world?
Frontiers in Psychology
face processing
Affective Priming
affective valence
other-race effect
implicit attitudes
author_facet Leslie E. Roos
Leslie E. Roos
Sophie eLebrecht
Sophie eLebrecht
James W. Tanaka
Michael J. Tarr
Michael J. Tarr
author_sort Leslie E. Roos
title Can singular examples change implicit racial attitudes in the real-world?
title_short Can singular examples change implicit racial attitudes in the real-world?
title_full Can singular examples change implicit racial attitudes in the real-world?
title_fullStr Can singular examples change implicit racial attitudes in the real-world?
title_full_unstemmed Can singular examples change implicit racial attitudes in the real-world?
title_sort can singular examples change implicit racial attitudes in the real-world?
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2013-09-01
description Implicit attitudes about social groups persist independently of explicit beliefs and can influence not only social behavior, but also medical and legal practices. Although examples presented in the laboratory can alter such implicit attitudes, it is unclear whether the same influence is exerted by real-world exemplars. Following the 2008 US election, Plant et al. reported that the Implicit Association Test or IAT revealed a decrease in negative implicit attitudes towards African-Americans. However, a large-scale study also employing the IAT found little evidence for a change in implicit attitudes pre- and post-election. Here we present evidence that the 2008 US election may have facilitated at least a temporary change in implicit racial attitudes in the US. Our results rely on the Affective Lexical Priming Score or ALPS and pre- and post-election measurements for both US and non-US participants. US students who, pre-election, exhibited negative associations with black faces, post-election showed positive associations with black faces. Canadian students pre- and post-election did not show a similar shift. To account for these findings, we posit that the socio-cognitive processes underlying ALPS are different from those underlying the IAT. Acknowledging that we cannot form a causal link between an intervening real-world event and laboratory-measured implicit attitudes, we speculate that our findings may be driven by the fact that the 2008 election campaign included extremely positive media coverage of President Obama and prominently featured his face in association with positive words – similar to the structure of ALPS. Even so, our real-world finding adds to the literature demonstrating the malleability of implicit attitudes and has implications for how we understand the socio-cognitive mechanisms underlying stereotypes.
topic face processing
Affective Priming
affective valence
other-race effect
implicit attitudes
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00594/full
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