학술논문

A recognition advantage for members of higher-status racial groups.
Document Type
article
Source
British journal of psychology (London, England : 1953), vol 114 Suppl 1, iss S1
Subject
Face
Humans
Self Concept
Attention
Recognition
Psychology
Racial Groups
cross-race effect
group status
hierarchy
intergroup relations
own-race effect
recognition memory
Business and Management
Psychology
Cognitive Sciences
Business & Management
Experimental Psychology
Language
Abstract
The other-race effect (ORE) is a recognition memory advantage afforded to one's racial ingroup versus outgroup. The motivational relevance of the ingroup-because of relationships, belonging and self-esteem-is central to many theoretical explanations for the ORE. However, to date, the motivational relevance of outgroups has received considerably less attention in the ORE literature. Across six experiments, Black, White, Asian and Latinx American participants consistently demonstrated better recognition memory for the faces of relatively higher-status racial/ethnic group members than those of lower-status groups. This higher-status recognition advantage even appeared to override the ORE, such that participants better recognized members of higher-status outgroups-but not an outgroup of equivalent status-compared to members of their own ingroup. However, across a variety of self-reported perceived status measures, status differences between the high- and low-status groups generally did not moderate the documented recognition advantage. These findings provide initial evidence for the potential role of group status in the ORE and in recognition memory more broadly, but future work is needed to rule out alternative explanations.