The Perception of Names in Experimental Studies on Ethnic Origin A Cross-National Validation in Europe

Open Access
Authors
  • A. Ghekiere
  • B. Martiniello
  • D. Capistrano
  • J. Kuhnle
  • S. Sprong
  • P. Atay
  • H. Cebolla Boado
  • M. Creighton
  • V. Di Stasio
  • M. Fernández-Reino
  • J. Hildebrandt
  • K. Kapanadze
  • V. Lachkovska
  • B. Lancee ORCID logo
  • I. Lázaro Bueno
  • J. Montag
  • B. Simonovits
  • S. Steinmetz
  • E. Strömberg ORCID logo
  • Á. Suárez-Vergne
  • S. van Oosten
  • V. Vass-Vigh
  • S. Veit
  • E. Zschirnt ORCID logo
  • P.-P. Verhaeghe
Publication date 28-11-2025
Journal Scientific Data
Article number 1883
Volume | Issue number 12
Number of pages 8
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
Abstract
A growing body of research uses field and survey experiments to examine ethnic discrimination. Central to these studies is the use of people’s names as a proxy for ethnic origin. However, names signal more than solely ethnic markers. Moreover, their signals might vary across national contexts. Scholars should pre-test the perception of names used in experiments in order to properly interpret their results and reveal the mechanisms underlying discrimination. There is, however, no comprehensive study yet in Europe which thoroughly pre-test the perception of names across countries with profoundly different migration histories. In this paper, we present the dataset ‘Perceptions of names in Europe’, containing the perceptions of 1078 names studied across nine European countries: Belgium, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, the Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. The dataset includes 82.400 evaluations from 8.240 respondents about the distinctiveness of Sub-Sahara African, Muslim and Roma names in terms of minority-majority group status, gender, religiosity, socioeconomic status, skin colour, and language proficiency. Information on respondents’ background characteristics are also available.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-025-06153-8
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