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Robert Kurzban

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Efforts to attenuate categorization by race have been unsuccessful. Method: Memory Confusion ... Prediction: Attenuate racial encoding. And you play like you're ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Robert Kurzban


1
Perceptions of Race
  • Robert Kurzban
  • University of Pennsylvania

The Second CEFOM/21 International
Symposium Culture, Norms, Evolution Hokkaido
University, Sapporo, Japan August 8th
2
Claims
  • Automaticity in categorization is an unlikely
    design feature (for race)
  • Race is a proxy for the fundamental conceptual
    cognitive element, coalition.
  • Providing an alternative coalitional dimension
    should be potent for changing categorization

3
Background Social Categorization Literature
  • Social Psychology 3 social categories are
    automatically encoded Age, Sex, Race
  • Efforts to attenuate categorization by race have
    been unsuccessful

4
Method Memory Confusion
  • Participants hear conversation see photos
  • In a recall task, participants are asked to
    recall who said what.
  • Errors in recall index categorization
  • Within-Between group errors calculated for each
    dimension (and statistically corrected)

5
  • Does anyone besides Rob have a question?
  • Which professor from UBC was It?

6
Taylor et al., 1978
  • Error rates at 66
  • More within than between race and sex errors
    observed
  • Categorization by race not changed by
    instructions to try to recall information.

7
There are certain categories that are highly
accessible and difficult to suppress, in
particular race and sex. Assuming that these
categories are extremely salient and powerful,
and are automatically encoded in the absence of
any specific memory instructions, they may be
rather insensitive to contextual variations 
We believe that one of the contributions made by
our research is to show how hard it is to
interfere with strong, automatically activated
categories Hewstone et al., 1991, p. 526
See also Hamilton, Stroessner, Driscoll, 1994
Fazio Dunton, 1997 Wegner Bargh, 1998
(Handbook chapter)
8
Additional Cites
  • our theoretical framework and the latency data
    lead us to believe that the process began with
    attention being automatically drawn to the race
    of the Black targets. Fazio Dunton, 1997
  • Easily discriminable personal featuresespecially
    the big three of gender, race, and agetend to
    activate preconsciously the categories or
    stereotypes associated with them.
  • Wegner Bargh, 1998 (Handbook chapter)

9
Theoretical Background Race
  • Adaptations are shaped by recurrent features of
    ancestral environment
  • Sharp phenotypic gradients were not a recurrent
    feature of ancestral environments.
  • It is unlikely that there are adaptations
    designed to encode race per se.
  • Racial categorization is a byproduct. But of what?

10
What is racial categorization a by-product of?
Color perception?
  • Stangor et al. expt 5 Colored sweatshirts had no
    meaning not used as a category by participants.
  • Note. Attentional demands cant explain this sex
    and race can simultaneously be strongly encoded.
  • Perceptual similarity should affect encoding. It
    doesnt (Stangor et al., expt 2)

11
What is racial categorization a by-product of?
Reasoning about natural kinds?
  • Various accounts posit humans essentialize human
    groups.
  • Rothbart Taylor, Hirschfeld, Gil-White
  • If so, this would explain the consistently strong
    results for encoding of race. But, these models
    do not (straightforwardly) predict that it should
    be possible to attenuate this process

12
What is racial categorization a by-product of?
Mechanisms designed to parse coalitions and
alliances?
  • Races were not a part of human ancestral
    environments. Dynamic alliances and coalitions
    were.
  • Categorization by race might be attenuated if
    race is not diagnostic of alliances, but another
    visual cue is.
  • Additional predictions derived from this
    analysis
  • While sex could have evolved domain-specific
    machinery, race could not.
  • Categorization by sex should be stronger than by
    race, everything else equal.

13
Experiment Details
  • Racially mixed (4 White, 4 Black) basketball
    teams (all male)
  • Competitive content in dialogue
  • IV Jersey color cue to team membership
  • Prediction Attenuate racial encoding

14
Sample Stimulus
And you play like youre in a zoo. Where you
should be anyway
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22
Results
  • Adding shirt color cue increases categorization
    by team (not surprising)
  • Adding shirt color cue decreases categorization
    by race (surprising)

23
Experiment 2
  • Same as above, except teams are all White, but of
    mixed SEX.

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25
Conclusion
  • Categorization by race is not automatic,
    and can be attenuated, even after only relatively
    short exposure.

26
But does the attenuation of race replicate?
27
Note No sex differences
n.s.
n.s.
28
Research Program
Cooperation
Categorization
  • More direct method Reaction times to gauge
    categorization
  • Additional control cognitive load condition
  • Additional contexts.
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