Do They Look the Same Unless They Are Angry? Investigating the Other-Race Effect in the Presence of Angry Expressions
- Publication type:
- Journal article
- Metadata:
-
- Autoren
- Roland Imhoff
- Barbara CN Muller
- Verena Heidrich
- Autoren-URL
- https://www.webofscience.com/api/gateway?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=fis-test-1&SrcAuth=WosAPI&KeyUT=WOS:001185708600001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=WOS_CPL
- DOI
- 10.1177/09567976231218640
- eISSN
- 1467-9280
- Externe Identifier
- Clarivate Analytics Document Solution ID: NM0D4
- PubMed Identifier: 38489402
- ISSN
- 0956-7976
- Ausgabe der Veröffentlichung
- 4
- Zeitschrift
- PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
- Schlüsselwörter
- other-race effect
- categorization
- stereotyping
- replication
- stimulus sampling
- open data
- open materials
- preregistered
- Paginierung
- 405 - 414
- Datum der Veröffentlichung
- 2024
- Status
- Published
- Titel
- Do They Look the Same Unless They Are Angry? Investigating the Other-Race Effect in the Presence of Angry Expressions
- Sub types
- Article
- Ausgabe der Zeitschrift
- 35
Data source: Web of Science (Lite)
- Other metadata sources:
-
- Abstract
- <jats:p> Ethnic out-group members are disproportionately more often the victim of misidentifications. The so-called other-race effect (ORE), the tendency to better remember faces of individuals belonging to one’s own ethnic in-group than faces belonging to an ethnic out-group, has been identified as one causal ingredient in such tragic incidents. Investigating an important aspect for the ORE—that is, emotional expression—the seminal study by Ackerman and colleagues (2006) found that White participants remembered neutral White faces better than neutral Black faces, but crucially, Black angry faces were better remembered than White angry faces (i.e., a reversed ORE). In the current study, we sought to replicate this study and directly tackle the potential causes for different results with later work. Three hundred ninety-six adult White U.S. citizens completed our study in which we manipulated the kind of employed stimuli (as in the original study vs. more standardized ones) whether participants knew of the recognition task already at the encoding phase. Additionally, participants were asked about the unusualness of the presented faces. We were able to replicate results from the Ackerman et al. (2006) study with the original stimuli but not with more standardized stimuli. </jats:p>
- Autoren
- Roland Imhoff
- Barbara CN Müller
- Verena Heidrich
- DOI
- 10.1177/09567976231218640
- eISSN
- 1467-9280
- ISSN
- 0956-7976
- Ausgabe der Veröffentlichung
- 4
- Zeitschrift
- Psychological Science
- Sprache
- en
- Online publication date
- 2024
- Paginierung
- 405 - 414
- Datum der Veröffentlichung
- 2024
- Status
- Published
- Herausgeber
- SAGE Publications
- Herausgeber URL
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09567976231218640
- Datum der Datenerfassung
- 2024
- Titel
- Do They Look the Same Unless They Are Angry? Investigating the Other-Race Effect in the Presence of Angry Expressions
- Ausgabe der Zeitschrift
- 35
Data source: Crossref
- Abstract
- Ethnic out-group members are disproportionately more often the victim of misidentifications. The so-called other-race effect (ORE), the tendency to better remember faces of individuals belonging to one's own ethnic in-group than faces belonging to an ethnic out-group, has been identified as one causal ingredient in such tragic incidents. Investigating an important aspect for the ORE-that is, emotional expression-the seminal study by Ackerman and colleagues (2006) found that White participants remembered neutral White faces better than neutral Black faces, but crucially, Black angry faces were better remembered than White angry faces (i.e., a reversed ORE). In the current study, we sought to replicate this study and directly tackle the potential causes for different results with later work. Three hundred ninety-six adult White U.S. citizens completed our study in which we manipulated the kind of employed stimuli (as in the original study vs. more standardized ones) whether participants knew of the recognition task already at the encoding phase. Additionally, participants were asked about the unusualness of the presented faces. We were able to replicate results from the Ackerman et al. (2006) study with the original stimuli but not with more standardized stimuli.
- Addresses
- Department of Social and Legal Psychology, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz.
- Autoren
- Roland Imhoff
- Barbara CN Müller
- Verena Heidrich
- DOI
- 10.1177/09567976231218640
- eISSN
- 1467-9280
- Externe Identifier
- PubMed Identifier: 38489402
- Funding acknowledgements
- deutsche forschungsgemeinschaft: SFB 1482/1 – 2021 – 442261292
- Open access
- false
- ISSN
- 0956-7976
- Ausgabe der Veröffentlichung
- 4
- Zeitschrift
- Psychological science
- Schlüsselwörter
- Humans
- Facial Expression
- Anger
- Mental Recall
- Adult
- Recognition, Psychology
- Ethnicity
- Sprache
- eng
- Medium
- Print-Electronic
- Online publication date
- 2024
- Paginierung
- 405 - 414
- Datum der Veröffentlichung
- 2024
- Status
- Published
- Publisher licence
- CC BY-NC
- Datum der Datenerfassung
- 2024
- Titel
- Do They Look the Same Unless They Are Angry? Investigating the Other-Race Effect in the Presence of Angry Expressions.
- Sub types
- Journal Article
- Ausgabe der Zeitschrift
- 35
Data source: Europe PubMed Central
- Abstract
- Ethnic out-group members are disproportionately more often the victim of misidentifications. The so-called other-race effect (ORE), the tendency to better remember faces of individuals belonging to one's own ethnic in-group than faces belonging to an ethnic out-group, has been identified as one causal ingredient in such tragic incidents. Investigating an important aspect for the ORE-that is, emotional expression-the seminal study by Ackerman and colleagues (2006) found that White participants remembered neutral White faces better than neutral Black faces, but crucially, Black angry faces were better remembered than White angry faces (i.e., a reversed ORE). In the current study, we sought to replicate this study and directly tackle the potential causes for different results with later work. Three hundred ninety-six adult White U.S. citizens completed our study in which we manipulated the kind of employed stimuli (as in the original study vs. more standardized ones) whether participants knew of the recognition task already at the encoding phase. Additionally, participants were asked about the unusualness of the presented faces. We were able to replicate results from the Ackerman et al. (2006) study with the original stimuli but not with more standardized stimuli.
- Autoren
- Roland Imhoff
- Barbara CN Müller
- Verena Heidrich
- Autoren-URL
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38489402
- DOI
- 10.1177/09567976231218640
- eISSN
- 1467-9280
- Ausgabe der Veröffentlichung
- 4
- Zeitschrift
- Psychol Sci
- Schlüsselwörter
- categorization
- open data
- open materials
- other-race effect
- preregistered
- replication
- stereotyping
- stimulus sampling
- Adult
- Humans
- Anger
- Mental Recall
- Recognition, Psychology
- Ethnicity
- Facial Expression
- Sprache
- eng
- Country
- United States
- Paginierung
- 405 - 414
- Datum der Veröffentlichung
- 2024
- Status
- Published
- Datum, an dem der Datensatz öffentlich gemacht wurde
- 2024
- Titel
- Do They Look the Same Unless They Are Angry? Investigating the Other-Race Effect in the Presence of Angry Expressions.
- Sub types
- Journal Article
- Ausgabe der Zeitschrift
- 35
Data source: PubMed
- Beziehungen:
- Property of