Black and White, or Shades of Gray? Racial Labeling of Barack Obama Predicts Implicit Race PerceptionPosted in Barack Obama, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, Social Science, United States on 2010-07-27 15:53Z by Steven |
Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy
Volume 10, Issue 1 (December 2010)
pages 207–222
DOI: 10.1111/j.1530-2415.2010.01213.x
Lori Wu Malahy
University of Washington
Mara Sedlins
University of Washington
Jason Plaks, Associate Professor of Psychology
University of Toronto
Yuichi Shoda, Professor of Psychology
University of Washington
The present research capitalized on the prominence and multiracial heritage of U.S. 2008 presidential election candidate Barack Obama to examine whether individual differences in classifying him as Black or as multiracial corresponded to differences in implicit perception of race. This research used a newly developed task (Sedlins, Malahy, & Shoda, 2010) with digitally morphed mixed-race faces to assess implicit race perception. Participants completed this task four times before and one time after the election. We found that people who labeled Obama as Black implicitly perceived race as more categorical than those who labeled Obama as multiracial. This finding adds to the growing literature on multiracial perception by demonstrating a relationship between the explicit use of multiracial and monoracial race classification and implicit race perception. The results suggest potential implications for governmental, educational, and judiciary usage of racial categories.
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