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Journal ArticleDOI

Implicit Ingroup Favoritism, Outgroup Favoritism, and Their Behavioral Manifestations

Nilanjana Dasgupta
- 01 Jun 2004 - 
- Vol. 17, Iss: 2, pp 143-169
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TLDR
For instance, this paper found that individuals who belong to socially advantaged groups typically exhibit more implicit preference for their ingroups and bias against outgroups than do members of socially disadvantaged groups.
Abstract
Three broad themes that emerge from the social psychological research on unconscious or implicit prejudice and stereotypes are highlighted in this article. First, individuals who belong to socially advantaged groups typically exhibit more implicit preference for their ingroups and bias against outgroups than do members of socially disadvantaged groups. This research suggests that intergroup preferences and prejudices are influenced by two different psychological forces—people's tendency to prefer groups associated with themselves as a confirmation of their high self-exteem versus their tendency to prefer groups valued by the mainstream culture as a confirmation of the sociopolitical order in society. Second, these inplicit prejudices and stereotypes often influence people's judgements, decisions, and behaviors in subtle but pernicious ways. However, the path from implicit bias to discriminatory action is not inevitable. People's awareness of potential bias, their motivation and opportunity to control it, and sometimes their consciously held beliefs can determine whether biases in the mind will manifest in action. Finally, a new line of research suggests that implicit biases exhibited by individuals who belong to socially disadvantaged groups towards their own group may have unintended behavioral consequences that are harmful to their ingroup and themselves.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Putting yourself in the skin of a black avatar reduces implicit racial bias

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that embodiment of light-skinned participants in adark-skinned VB significantly reduced implicit racial bias against dark-skinned people, in contrast to embodiment in light- skinned, purple-skinned or with no VB.
Journal ArticleDOI

New approaches to understanding racial prejudice and discrimination

TL;DR: The authors reviewed and criticised recent work on prejudice, discrimination, and racism, with an emphasis on evidence of continuing discrimination in the United States and efforts to understand its basis in prejudice, and argued that research on implicit prejudice, largely developed by psychologists, provides an important new understanding of the basis of discrimination and should be incorporated in sociological accounts.

Putting yourself in the skin of a black avatar reduces implicit racial bias consciousness and cognition

TL;DR: In this article, the authors demonstrate that embodiment of light-skinned participants in a dark-skinned VR environment significantly reduced implicit racial bias against dark skinned people, in contrast to embodiment in light skinned, purple-skinned or with no VB.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Race Discrimination System

TL;DR: The authors show that race discrimination is a system whose emergent properties reinforce the effects of their components, i.e., it is a meta-level phenomenon that shapes our culture, cognitions, and institutions, thereby distorting whether and how we perceive and make sense of racial disparities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anthropomorphism: Opportunities and Challenges in Human-Robot Interaction

TL;DR: The potential benefits and challenges of building anthropomorphic robots are discussed, from both a philosophical perspective and from the viewpoint of empirical research in the fields of human–robot interaction and social psychology.
References
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