articleJournal of Personality and Social PsychologyDec 1, 2004Closed access

Seeing Black: Race, Crime, and Visual Processing.

Stanford University · Pennsylvania State University · +2 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Using police officers and undergraduates as participants, the authors investigated the influence of stereotypic associations on visual processing in 5 studies. Study 1 demonstrates that Black faces influence participants' ability to spontaneously detect degraded images of crime-relevant objects. Conversely, Studies 2-4 demonstrate that activating abstract concepts (i.e., crime and basketball) induces attentional biases toward Black male faces. Moreover, these processing biases may be related to the degree to which a social group member is physically representative of the social group (Studies 4-5). These studies, taken together, suggest that some associations between social groups and concepts are…

Citation impact

1,203
total citations
FWCI
45.31
Percentile
100%
References
92
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Perception
  • Race (biology)
  • Basketball
  • Social psychology
  • Social perception
  • Visual processing
  • Visual perception
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Peace, Justice and strong institutions
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