1. The cross-race effect in face recognition memory by bicultural individuals.
- Author
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Marsh BU, Pezdek K, and Ozery DH
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Facial Recognition, Hispanic or Latino psychology, Mental Recall, Repetition Priming, White People psychology
- Abstract
Social-cognitive models of the cross-race effect (CRE) generally specify that cross-race faces are automatically categorized as an out-group, and that different encoding processes are then applied to same-race and cross-race faces, resulting in better recognition memory for same-race faces. We examined whether cultural priming moderates the cognitive categorization of cross-race faces. In Experiment 1, monoracial Latino-Americans, considered to have a bicultural self, were primed to focus on either a Latino or American cultural self and then viewed Latino and White faces. Latino-Americans primed as Latino exhibited higher recognition accuracy (A') for Latino than White faces; those primed as American exhibited higher recognition accuracy for White than Latino faces. In Experiment 2, as predicted, prime condition did not moderate the CRE in European-Americans. These results suggest that for monoracial biculturals, priming either of their cultural identities influences the encoding processes applied to same- and cross-race faces, thereby moderating the CRE., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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