Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Kurzban, Tooby & Cosmides: “Can race be erased?” PNAS 2001 Question: does the simple act of categorizing individuals into two social groups predispose humans to discriminate in favor of their in-group and against the out-group? Studies have confirmed that this behavior is remarkably easy to elicit: people discriminate against out-groups even when they are assigned to groups temporarily and anonymously by an experimenter who uses dimensions that are trivial. Throughout human history, intergroup conflict has focused on categorization between us and them.
2
Selection may have favored the cognitive machinery for automatic encoding of an individual’s sex and age, but the same process for race is unlikely to have evolved Our typical ancestral individual would almost never encounter individuals genetically distinct enough to classify as a different “race” Their hypothesis: coalition encoding is as fundamental as sex encoding and age encoding, and more fundamental than race encoding Kurzban, Tooby & Cosmides: “Can race be erased?” PNAS 2001
3
Hypothesis: Automatic and mandatory encoding of race is a byproduct of adaptations that evolved to detect coalitions & alliances Hunter gatherer societies lived in bands and neighboring bands frequently came into contact with each other Computational machinery designed to detect coalitions should be sensitive to two factors: Patterns of coordinated action Cues that predict an individual’s political allegiances
4
Predictions #1: Race per se will not be encoded across all social contexts and with equal strength #2: Shared visual appearance is not necessary for coalition encoding #3: Arbitrary cues other than racial appearance can be endowed with the same properties as race sometimes has by linking them to coalition membership
5
Predictions (cont…) #4: Strength of race encoding will diminish by creating a social context where Race is no longer a valid cue to coalition There are alternative cues that reliably indicate coalitional affiliation #5: Sex will be encoded more strongly than race even in contexts where it is irrelevant to coalition and task #6: Encoding of sex will not diminish coalition encoding even though sex will be encoded far more strongly than race
6
Methods Approach: Memory confusion protocol: dimensions used in encoding will be revealed by dimensions along which mistakes are made General prediction: subjects will treat the dimension coalition in a fashion parallel to sex, age, and especially race Specific prediction: subjects will encode coalition incidentally as part of impression formation without having been instructed to do so
7
Methods Memory confusion protocol Asked to form impressions of individuals See sequence of sentences paired with photos Surprise recall task Uses errors in recall to reveal whether subjects are categorizing target individuals into groups
8
Subjects were told that (i) they will be seeing a series of photographs of individuals, each of which is paired with a sentence uttered by the individual pictures; (ii) each pictured individual belongs to one of two rival basketball teams that had been in a fight during the previous season, and their sentences were uttered in the context of a group conversation; and (iii) their task is to form an impression of the target individual as they are viewed Methods
9
There was be a statement from one individual of one team followed by a statement from an individual of the other team, back and forth, and so on. Each subject viewed 24 such one-sentence back-and-forth statements, for 8.5 sec each. Each statement was paired with a photo of the individual that made it (so each individual in a group made a total of 3 such statements) Methods
10
Experiment 1 Each speaker was a young man Only way to identify coalition was through the content of what they said 4 speakers in each coalition Two Euro-American men Two African-American men With no other identifiers, race should be used for encoding
11
Experiment 2 Identical to Experiment 1 Only added difference was whether individuals wore yellow or gray jerseys So now we have a visual coalitional cue (though a fairly innocuous one?)
12
Experiment 3 and 4 Same as experiment as 1 and 2 The African Americans were replaced by White Euro American women Prediction that gender will be more salient here than race was in expts 1 and 2
13
Results – By Experiments Expt 1 (no visual clues as to coalition) More within-coalition than between-coalition errors Effect of race 2X larger than effect of coalition Expt 2 (yellow shirts vs grey jerseys) Significant increase in coalitional effect size Effect size of race reduced Effect of coalition larger than of race
14
Results – By Experiments Expt 3: (males & females, no visual coalition cues) Effect size of sex very high Effect of sex greater than effect of coalition or race Effect size of coalition small Expt 4 (males & females + yellow vs gray jerseys) Effect size of sex very high Effect of sex greater than effect of coalition or race But effect size of coalition remains large
17
Discussion – Predictions 1, 2, and 3 1: Race is not encoded equally across all social contexts Effect size of race diminished in expt 2 compared to expt 1 2: Shared appearance ≠ coalition. Coalitional encoding without appearance possible More within rather than between coalition errors in expt 1 3: Cues other than race can be substituted for coalitional membership Effect of shirt color in expt 2 larger than in expt 1.
18
Discussion – Predictions 4, 5, and 6 4: Racial encoding decreases when it is no longer valid and there are better indicators of coalition Effect size for race diminished in expt 2 compared to expt 1. 5: Sex is encoded more strongly than race Effect sizes for sex were very high for expts 3 and 5 6: Sex encoding does not affect coalitional encoding Coalitional effect did not decrease from expt 1 to 3 and from 2 to 4
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.