Sent to you by Tee via Google Reader: Racial Biases Fade Away Toward
Members Of Your Own Group via Black Politics on the Web by The Admin on
3/23/09
White people don’t show hints of unconscious bias against blacks who
belong to the same group as them, a new study suggests.

But this lack of bias only applied to black people in their group,
according to the findings. Most white people in the study still showed
evidence of some unconscious bias towards blacks who were in an
opposing group, or who were unaffiliated with either group.

What impressed the researchers, however, was just how quickly these
group bonds could form. The lack of bias toward fellow black group
members was uncovered just minutes after whites joined the mixed-race
group, and without participants even meeting their fellow members
personally.

“The results suggest that when we share some kind of identity with a
group of people, we automatically and immediately feel positively
toward them, regardless of race,” said Jay Van Bavel, co-author of the
study and post-doctoral fellow in psychology at Ohio State University.

“You can think in terms of people who go to the playground and play a
game of pickup basketball. All it takes is a flip of a coin to make
someone your teammate, and at least for that game, you’re going to feel
positively toward your teammates, white and black.”

Van Bavel conducted the study with William Cunningham, assistant
professor of psychology at Ohio State. Their study appears in the March
issue of the journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.

The study involved two separate but related experiments with college
students, one done in Canada and one in the United States.

The students took a computer test commonly used by psychologists to
reveal unconscious, or automatic racial bias. The test examines
people’s first reactions to seeing a black face, before their conscious
mind can edit and override biases.

Even though most people disavow any racial bias, this test consistently
shows that about three-quarters of white North Americans have some
level of unconscious racial bias, Van Bavel said. These unconscious
thoughts can lead people to make biased decisions without realizing
they are being biased.

For example, a manager may pass over a resume of a person whose name
suggests she is an African American, without even recognizing why he is
doing it, according to Van Bavel.

The computer test flashes pictures of black and white faces quickly on
the screen followed nearly instantaneously by positive words (such as
love) or negative words (such as hatred). Participants have to very
quickly – within about one-half of a second — categorize the words as
positive or negative.

In general, white people find it more difficult to correctly classify
positive words when they were first shown a photo of a black person.

“Seeing a black face automatically activates this association with
negative things for many white people and if they don’t have time to
correct this negative image – which they don’t in this study – they
associate negative words with black faces,” Cunningham said.

In the first experiment, 109 students at the University of Toronto were
randomly assigned to one of two groups made up for the study – one
named the Lions and the other called the Tigers. A control group
learned about the two groups, but was not assigned to either one of
them.

Members of the Lions and Tigers were shown photos of the members of
both groups, and told it was important to learn who belonged to their
team, and who belonged to other team.

Later, they were given the computer bias test. Results showed that
students in the control group, who were not a member of either
mixed-race group, showed a preference for white faces over black faces,
as was expected.

But white members of the two teams showed no bias against black members
of their own teams. They did, however, show bias towards black members
of the opposing team.

“Team members were evaluating people based on whether they were on the
same team – not evaluating them based on their race,” Cunningham said.

The second experiment involved 126 students at Ohio State. The setup
was essentially the same, except that participants also evaluated white
and black faces that were not members of either of the two groups.
Results showed that white students showed no bias against blacks who
belonged to their team. They showed nearly equivalent levels of bias
towards black members of the opposing team, and black members who were
not associated with either team.

This suggests that whites were showing increased positive feelings
toward black members of their own team, but not increased negative
feelings toward blacks who belonged to the opposing team.

“White students felt the same toward blacks on the opposing team and
people who didn’t belong to any team,” Van Bavel said. “That means
liking people from your team doesn’t mean you have to hate members of
the other team.”

Van Bavel said the unconscious biases studied in this research have
real-life consequences.

“What’s dangerous about these attitudes is that they can come into play
even when we’re not aware of them, and even when we think we are being
egalitarian,” he said.

But this study suggests there may be ways to battle this unconscious,
automatic racism.

“We want to change how people see someone at the very earliest stages.
If you see someone as a member of your own team or group, race may not
even come to mind. You are thinking about that person in terms of some
kind of shared relationship,” Van Bavel said.

In the real world, this means creating contexts to show how people are
connected whenever possible. This may mean emphasizing our shared
identities as residents of a city, fans of a sports team or members of
a church.

“It’s part of human nature to feel positively about members of our own
group,” Cunningham said. “The challenge is to find ways to call
attention to our shared identities.”

Science Daily

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