Title of article
Examining the consequences of exposure to racism for the executive functioning of Black students
Author/Authors
Bair، نويسنده , , Allison N. and Steele، نويسنده , , Jennifer R.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
6
From page
127
To page
132
Abstract
Recent research has demonstrated that interracial interactions, reminders of stigmatized identities, and exposure to ambiguous racism can deplete the self-control resources of minority group members. In the current study we examined whether hearing blatant racism expressed in an interracial context would deplete the self-control of Black participants and whether this depletion would be moderated by participants’ level of racial centrality. After listening to a Black or a White confederate express either support for racial profiling (racist condition) or increased campus parking fees (neutral condition), Black participants completed a Stroop color-naming task to assess self-control depletion. Participants experienced self-control depletion following interracial encounters, regardless of whether the views expressed were racist. As expected, however, racial centrality moderated the depletion effect when racism was involved, with participants higher in centrality showing greater depletion following an encounter with racism from a White partner.
Keywords
Exposure to racism , Self-regulation , Stigma , prejudice , Racial centrality , Targets of prejudice , Interracial interactions , ego depletion
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1959227
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