It is commonly believed that race is perceived through another’s facial features, such as skin color. In the present research, we demonstrate that cues to social status that often surround a face systematically change the perception of its race. Participants categorized the race of faces that varied along White–Black morph continua and that were presented with high-status or low-status attire. Low-status attire increased the likelihood of categorization as Black, whereas high-status attire increased the likelihood of categorization as White; and this influence grew stronger as race became more ambiguous (Experiment 1). When faces with high-status attire were categorized as Black or faces with low-status attire were categorized as White, par...
Information that conveys racial group membership plays a powerful role in influencing people's i...
What gives a face its race?By biological criteria, human “races” do not exist (e.g., Cosmides et al....
Discrimination and recognition are often poorer for other-race than own-race faces. These other-race...
It is commonly believed that race is perceived through another’s facial features, such as skin color...
It is commonly believed that race is perceived through another's facial features, such as skin color...
It is commonly believed that race is perceived through another's facial features, such as skin color...
Visual racial identification is the cognitive social process whereby people categorize individuals i...
The presents study looks at how perceived attractiveness of a person alters the other-race effect. T...
Two phenomena, including the Other Race Effect and the Other Race Classification Advantage, describe...
ABSTRACT—Two studies tested the hypothesis that perceivers’ prejudice and targets ’ facial expressio...
Perceptual mechanisms have been proposed for the categorization of racial faces. Social cognitive me...
Race is perceived categorically in faces. Clear boundaries separate faces perceived as belonging to ...
Symposia: The Other-race Effect in Face PerceptionVision: the Journal of the Vision Society of Japan...
Faces can be categorized in various ways, for example as male or female or as belonging to a specifi...
The effect of multisensory-induced changes on body-ownership and self-awareness using bodily illusio...
Information that conveys racial group membership plays a powerful role in influencing people's i...
What gives a face its race?By biological criteria, human “races” do not exist (e.g., Cosmides et al....
Discrimination and recognition are often poorer for other-race than own-race faces. These other-race...
It is commonly believed that race is perceived through another’s facial features, such as skin color...
It is commonly believed that race is perceived through another's facial features, such as skin color...
It is commonly believed that race is perceived through another's facial features, such as skin color...
Visual racial identification is the cognitive social process whereby people categorize individuals i...
The presents study looks at how perceived attractiveness of a person alters the other-race effect. T...
Two phenomena, including the Other Race Effect and the Other Race Classification Advantage, describe...
ABSTRACT—Two studies tested the hypothesis that perceivers’ prejudice and targets ’ facial expressio...
Perceptual mechanisms have been proposed for the categorization of racial faces. Social cognitive me...
Race is perceived categorically in faces. Clear boundaries separate faces perceived as belonging to ...
Symposia: The Other-race Effect in Face PerceptionVision: the Journal of the Vision Society of Japan...
Faces can be categorized in various ways, for example as male or female or as belonging to a specifi...
The effect of multisensory-induced changes on body-ownership and self-awareness using bodily illusio...
Information that conveys racial group membership plays a powerful role in influencing people's i...
What gives a face its race?By biological criteria, human “races” do not exist (e.g., Cosmides et al....
Discrimination and recognition are often poorer for other-race than own-race faces. These other-race...