Low-prejudice people vary considerably in their ability to regulate intergroup responses. The authors hypothesized that this variability arises from a neural mechanism for monitoring conflict between automatic race-biased tendencies and egalitarian intentions. In Study 1, they found that low-prejudice participants whose nonprejudiced responses are motivated by internal (but not external) factors exhibited better control on a stereotype-inhibition task than did participants motivated by a combination of internal and external factors. This difference was associated with greater conflict-monitoring activity, measured by event-related potentials, when responses required stereotype inhibition. Study 2 demonstrated that group differences were spe...
Within the framework of intergroup relations, the authors analyzed the time people spent evaluating ...
Two broad distal causes of prejudice are past history of intergroup contact and general political pr...
This article addresses the role of intentional control in intergroup favoritism and out-group discri...
Low-prejudice people vary considerably in their ability to regulate intergroup responses. The author...
extent to which internally and externally driven regulatory processes arise from the same mechanism ...
A decade of research indicates that individual differences in motivation to respond without prejudic...
& Low- and high-prejudiced individuals exhibited differential cortical and behavioral responses ...
Outgroup aggression characterizes intergroup conflicts in human societies. Previous research on rela...
The present research used validated cardiovascular measures to examine threat reactions among member...
The primary aim of the present investigation was to examine the relationship between perceived contr...
We review psychological research on intergroup conflict. First, we outline psychological perspective...
Adopting an evolutionary approach to the psychology of race bias, we posit that intergroup conflict ...
While previous research has examined social norms and intergroup contact as predictors of prejudice,...
We review psychological research on intergroup conflict. First, we outline psychological perspective...
Individuals who are primarily internally motivated to respond without prejudice show less bias on im...
Within the framework of intergroup relations, the authors analyzed the time people spent evaluating ...
Two broad distal causes of prejudice are past history of intergroup contact and general political pr...
This article addresses the role of intentional control in intergroup favoritism and out-group discri...
Low-prejudice people vary considerably in their ability to regulate intergroup responses. The author...
extent to which internally and externally driven regulatory processes arise from the same mechanism ...
A decade of research indicates that individual differences in motivation to respond without prejudic...
& Low- and high-prejudiced individuals exhibited differential cortical and behavioral responses ...
Outgroup aggression characterizes intergroup conflicts in human societies. Previous research on rela...
The present research used validated cardiovascular measures to examine threat reactions among member...
The primary aim of the present investigation was to examine the relationship between perceived contr...
We review psychological research on intergroup conflict. First, we outline psychological perspective...
Adopting an evolutionary approach to the psychology of race bias, we posit that intergroup conflict ...
While previous research has examined social norms and intergroup contact as predictors of prejudice,...
We review psychological research on intergroup conflict. First, we outline psychological perspective...
Individuals who are primarily internally motivated to respond without prejudice show less bias on im...
Within the framework of intergroup relations, the authors analyzed the time people spent evaluating ...
Two broad distal causes of prejudice are past history of intergroup contact and general political pr...
This article addresses the role of intentional control in intergroup favoritism and out-group discri...