Does the Name-Race Implicit Association Test measure racial prejudice?
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| Publication date | 2011 |
| Journal | Experimental Psychology |
| Volume | Issue number | 58 | 4 |
| Pages (from-to) | 271-277 |
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| Abstract |
Research using the Implicit Association Test (IAT) has shown that names labeled as Caucasian elicit more positive associations than names labeled as non-Caucasian. One interpretation of this result is that the IAT measures latent racial prejudice. An alternative explanation is that the result is due to differences in in-group/out-group membership. In this study, we conducted three different IATs: one with same-race Dutch names versus racially charged Moroccan names; one with same-race Dutch names versus racially neutral Finnish names; and one with Moroccan names versus Finnish names. Results showed equivalent effects for the Dutch-Moroccan and Dutch-Finnish IATs, but no effect for the Finnish-Moroccan IAT. This suggests that the name-race IAT-effect is not due to racial prejudice. A diffusion model decomposition indicated that the IAT-effects were caused by changes in speed of information accumulation, response conservativeness, and non-decision time.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1027/1618-3169/a000093 |
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