Joy-Gaba and Nosek (2010): The Surprisingly Limited Malleability of Implicit Racial Evaluations
hdl:1902.1/13405
Version: 1 – Released: Fri Aug 07 13:56:15 EDT 2009
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Data Citation Details
Study Global IDhdl:1902.1/13405
AuthorsJennifer (Joy-Gaba); Brian (Nosek)
ProducerJennifer Joy-Gaba, University of Virginia
Production Date2009
DistributorBrian Nosek, University of Virginia; Murray Research Archive Logo
Distributor ContactJennifer Joy-Gaba (University of Virginia), jaj3f@virginia.edu
Distribution DateAugust 06, 2009
Deposit DateAugust 06, 2009
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Abstract and Scope
Abstract

Implicit preferences for Whites compared to Blacks can be reduced via exposure to admired Black and disliked White individuals (Dasgupta & Greenwald, 2001). In four studies (total N=4,628), while attempting clarify the mechanism, we found that implicit preferences for Whites were weaker in the “positive Blacks” exposure condition compared to a control condition (weighted average d=.08). This effect was substantially smaller than the original demonstration (Dasgupta & Greenwald, 2001; d=.82). Factors beyond exposure to admired Blacks may be necessary for the effect, such as making race accessible during exemplar exposure, and including negative White exemplars. Our evidence suggests that exposure to known-group members shifts implicit race bias reliably, but weakly.

Abstract Date2009
Related PublicationsJoy-Gaba, J. A., & Nosek, B. A. (2010). The surprisingly limited malleability of implicit race evaluations. Social Psychology.
Related Materialhttp://briannosek.com/papers/
Time Period Covered2009 - 2009
Date of Collection2007 - 2009
Data Availability
Number of Files 10
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