Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
948248 Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 2012 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Decades of research have shown that many people harbor implicit attitudes that are positive toward Whites relative to Blacks. With some notable exceptions, these findings are almost always obtained using implicit attitude tasks that assess attitudes toward Whites and Black simultaneously. This makes it difficult to determine whether implicit race bias effects are the result of strong liking for Whites, dislike for Blacks, or both. The present article reports results from a study in which participants' automatic bias towards Blacks and Whites is assessed across multiple evaluative contexts. Results show consistent negative automatic attitudes towards Blacks, but there was considerable variability in participants' attitudes toward Whites. Consistent with the idea that strong attitudes are less contextually sensitive than weaker attitudes (e.g. Krosnick, 1988), it is concluded that participants harbor strong automatic bias against Blacks, but not strong favoritism for Whites. Implications for a context-centered approach to implicit attitude measurement are discussed.

► Implicit attitudes toward Blacks and Whites were measured across multiple evaluative contexts. ► Attitudes towards Blacks were consistently negative, but attitudes toward Whites were context dependent. ► These data indicate strong negative bias for Blacks but relatively neutral bias for Whites. ► Implicit attitude variability can be used a marker of attitude strength.

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