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#HandsUpDon’tShoot: The Psychology of “Shooter Bias” Prof. Stephenie Chaudoir & Tyler Zeoli ‘15 Psychology Department 12.11.14.

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Presentation on theme: "#HandsUpDon’tShoot: The Psychology of “Shooter Bias” Prof. Stephenie Chaudoir & Tyler Zeoli ‘15 Psychology Department 12.11.14."— Presentation transcript:

1 #HandsUpDon’tShoot: The Psychology of “Shooter Bias” Prof. Stephenie Chaudoir & Tyler Zeoli ‘15 Psychology Department 12.11.14

2 Caption 2 under the light skinned person: "Two residents wade through chest-deep water after finding bread and soda from a local grocery store..." Caption 1 under the dark skinned person: " A young man walks through chest deep flood water after looting a grocery store in New Orleans"

3 Implicit Stereotypes as Cognitive Residue Black Bad =

4 Automatic vs. Controlled Processing Implicit Automatic Process Behavior Explicit Controlled Process Inhibit Initial Bias

5 “Shooter Bias” Hypothesis: Unarmed Black Men will be shot at more often than Unarmed White Men.

6 Plant & Peruche, 2005

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8 The “Take-Aways” 1.Shooter bias is a real behavioral phenomenon that can be overcome with training 1.We are ALL vulnerable to _____ bias when operating on “auto-pilot”

9 #factivism References and Further Reading Correll, J., Park, B., Judd, C.M., & Wittenbrink, B. (2002). The police officer’s dilemma: Using ethnicity to disambiguate potentially threatening individuals. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 83, 1314-1329. [pdf][pdf] Correll, J., Park, B., Judd, C.M., Wittenbrink, B., & Sadler, M.S. (2007). Across the thin blue line: Police officers and racial bias in the decision to shoot. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 92, 1006-1023. [pdf][pdf] Eberhardt, J.L., Goff, P.A., Purdie, V.J. & Davies, P.G. (2004). Seeing Black: Race, crime, and visual processing. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 87, 876-893. [pdf] [pdf] Payne, B. K. (2005). Conceptualizing control in social cognition: How executive functioning modulates the expression of automatic stereotyping. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 89, 488-503. [citation][citation] Plant, E. A., & Peruche, B. M. (2005). The consequences of race for police officer’s responses to criminal suspects. Psychological Science, 16, 180-183. [pdf][pdf] See also: www.fairandimpartialpolicing.comwww.fairandimpartialpolicing.com You can find this powerpoint on Prof. Chaudoir’s website, or email for more details: schaudoi@holycross.edu! Thanks!schaudoi@holycross.edu

10 Additional Questions Does shooter race affect bias? – No. Black and White participants are equally likely to exhibit shooter bias (Correll et al., 2002; Study 4). Are law enforcement more biased than community members? – No. Community members make more errors than police officers (Correll et al., 2007).

11 Implicit Association Test (IAT)

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