Kevin D. added themselves to the department Psychology.
Kevin D. started following the work of Chrisa D. Pornaris, University Of Birmingham, Psychology.
Kevin D. started following the work of Eric Hehman, University of Delaware, Psychology.
- Facial Recognition
- Group Processes & Intergroup Relations
- Psychology
- Social Neuroscience
- Social Psychology
- Stereotypes and Prejudice
Papers
The Influence of ingroup/outgroup categorization on same- and other-race face processing: The moderating role of inter-versus intra-racial context
Co-authored with Dr. Kimberly Quinn and Professor Glyn Humphreys. Published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
We investigated the impact of ingroup/outgroup categorization on the encoding of same-race and other-race faces presented in inter-racial and intra-racial contexts (Experiments 1 and 2, respectively). White participants performed a same/different matching task on pairs of upright and inverted faces that were either same-race (White) or other-race (Black), and labelled as being from the same university or a different university. In Experiment 1, the same- and other-race faces were intermixed. For other-race faces,participants demonstrated greater configural processing following same- than other-university labelling. Same-race faces showed strong configural coding irrespective of the university labeling. In Experiment 2, faces were blocked by race. Participants demonstrated greater configural processing of same- than other university faces, but now for both same- and other-race faces. These results demonstrate that other-race face processing is sensitive to non-racial ingroup/outgroup status regardless of racial context, but that the sensitivity of same-race face processing to the same cues depends on the racial context in which targets are encountered.
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