Motivation to Control Prejudice Predicts Categorization of MultiracialsPosted in Articles, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, United States on 2014-01-25 15:52Z by Steven |
Motivation to Control Prejudice Predicts Categorization of Multiracials
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
Volume 40, Number 5 (May 2014)
pages 590-603
DOI: 10.1177/0146167213520457
Jacqueline M. Chen, Post-doctoral Scholar
University of California, Davis
Wesley G. Moons, Assistant Professor of Psychology
University of California, Davis
Sarah E. Gaither
Department of Psychology
Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts
David L. Hamilton, Research Professor of Social Psychology
University of California, Santa Barbara
Jeffrey W. Sherman, Professor of Psychology
University of California, Davis
Multiracial individuals often do not easily fit into existing racial categories. Perceivers may adopt a novel racial category to categorize multiracial targets, but their willingness to do so may depend on their motivations. We investigated whether perceivers’ levels of internal motivation to control prejudice (IMS) and external motivation to control prejudice (EMS) predicted their likelihood of categorizing Black–White multiracial faces as Multiracial. Across four studies, IMS positively predicted perceivers’ categorizations of multiracial faces as Multiracial. The association between IMS and Multiracial categorizations was strongest when faces were most racially ambiguous. Explicit prejudice, implicit prejudice, and interracial contact were ruled out as explanations for the relationship between IMS and Multiracial categorizations. EMS may be negatively associated with the use of the Multiracial category. Therefore, perceivers’ motivations to control prejudice have important implications for racial categorization processes.
Read or purchase the article here.