The authors examined White and Black participants ’ emotional, physiological, and behavioral responses to same-race or different-race evaluators, following rejecting social feedback or accepting social feedback. As expected, in ingroup interactions, the authors observed deleterious responses to social rejection and benign responses to social acceptance. Deleterious responses included cardiovascular (CV) reactivity consistent with threat states and poorer performance, whereas benign responses included CV reactivity consistent with challenge states and better performance. In intergroup interactions, however, a more complex pattern of responses emerged. Social rejection from different-race evaluators engendered more anger and activational resp...
The Intergroup Sensitivity Effect (ISE) is the tendency for people to respond more negatively when t...
Participants responded to a scenario about a person who was rejected for a promotion. When people be...
Low-prejudice people vary considerably in their ability to regulate intergroup responses. The author...
The authors examined White and Black participants ’ emotional, physiological, and behavioral respons...
The authors examined White and Black participants' emotional, physiological, and behavioral response...
When stigmatized or oppressed groups are able to protect their self-esteem by attributing a negative...
Prior research has revealed racial disparities in health outcomes and health-compromising behaviors,...
Prior research has revealed racial disparities in health outcomes and health-compromising behaviors,...
Although higher social class carries mental and physical health benefits, these advantages are less ...
Objective: The objective of this study was to examine cardiovascular responses among Black, non-Hisp...
& Low- and high-prejudiced individuals exhibited differential cortical and behavioral responses ...
Strong social and legal norms in the United States discourage the overt expression of bias against e...
The present research used validated cardiovascular measures to examine threat reactions among member...
This study examined the role of Blacks ’ level of racial identification in understanding how Blacks ...
Research has indicated that both implicit and explicit forms of racial rejection can have adverse ef...
The Intergroup Sensitivity Effect (ISE) is the tendency for people to respond more negatively when t...
Participants responded to a scenario about a person who was rejected for a promotion. When people be...
Low-prejudice people vary considerably in their ability to regulate intergroup responses. The author...
The authors examined White and Black participants ’ emotional, physiological, and behavioral respons...
The authors examined White and Black participants' emotional, physiological, and behavioral response...
When stigmatized or oppressed groups are able to protect their self-esteem by attributing a negative...
Prior research has revealed racial disparities in health outcomes and health-compromising behaviors,...
Prior research has revealed racial disparities in health outcomes and health-compromising behaviors,...
Although higher social class carries mental and physical health benefits, these advantages are less ...
Objective: The objective of this study was to examine cardiovascular responses among Black, non-Hisp...
& Low- and high-prejudiced individuals exhibited differential cortical and behavioral responses ...
Strong social and legal norms in the United States discourage the overt expression of bias against e...
The present research used validated cardiovascular measures to examine threat reactions among member...
This study examined the role of Blacks ’ level of racial identification in understanding how Blacks ...
Research has indicated that both implicit and explicit forms of racial rejection can have adverse ef...
The Intergroup Sensitivity Effect (ISE) is the tendency for people to respond more negatively when t...
Participants responded to a scenario about a person who was rejected for a promotion. When people be...
Low-prejudice people vary considerably in their ability to regulate intergroup responses. The author...