articleJournal of Personality and Social PsychologyOct 1, 2003Closed access

Race and gender on the brain: Electrocortical measures of attention to the race and gender of multiply categorizable individuals.

University of Colorado Boulder

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Abstract

The degree to which perceivers automatically attend to and encode social category information was investigated. Event-related brain potentials were used to assess attentional and working-memory processes on-line as participants were presented with pictures of Black and White males and females. The authors found that attention was preferentially directed to Black targets very early in processing (by about 100 ms after stimulus onset) in both experiments. Attention to gender also emerged early but occurred about 50 ms later than attention to race. Later working-memory processes were sensitive to more complex relations between the group memberships of a target individual and the surrounding social context. These…

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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Categorization
  • Race (biology)
  • Cognitive psychology
  • Stimulus (psychology)
  • Working memory
  • Developmental psychology
  • Task (project management)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Gender equality
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