Reducing Social Judgment Biases May Require Identifying the Potential Source of Bias

被引:23
作者
Axt, Jordan R. [1 ,2 ]
Casola, Grace [3 ]
Nosek, Brian A. [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Duke Univ, 334 Blackwell St,Suite 320, Durham, NC 27701 USA
[2] Project Implicit, Seattle, WA USA
[3] Univ Virginia, Charlottesville, VA USA
[4] Ctr Open Sci, Charlottesville, VA USA
关键词
bias; social judgment; discrimination; prejudice; IMPLICIT ASSOCIATION TEST; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; STEREOTYPE ACTIVATION; PREJUDICE; BREAKING; GENDER; MODEL; RACE;
D O I
10.1177/0146167218814003
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Social judgment is shaped by multiple biases operating simultaneously, but most bias-reduction interventions target only a single social category. In seven preregistered studies (total N > 7,000), we investigated whether asking participants to avoid one social bias affected that and other social biases. Participants selected honor society applicants based on academic credentials. Applicants also differed on social categories irrelevant for selection: attractiveness and ingroup status. Participants asked to avoid potential bias in one social category showed small but reliable reductions in bias for that category (r = .095), but showed near-zero bias reduction on the unmentioned social category (r = .006). Asking participants to avoid many possible social biases or alerting them to bias without specifically identifying a category did not consistently reduce bias. The effectiveness of interventions for reducing social biases may be highly specific, perhaps even contingent on explicitly and narrowly identifying the potential source of bias.
引用
收藏
页码:1232 / 1251
页数:20
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