The Hill
•83% Informative
Harvard University study sheds new light on deeply ingrained implicit bias around race.
Participants in psychological tests had an easier time identifying people at the top end of thei egalitarian racial hierarchy as human.
Researchers examined 61,000 people over a series of experiments determining how quickly participants could categorize an image as human or non-human.
A Harvard Monday found that people acro the National Academy of Sciences of non-dominant racial groups as “less evolved” The study also found that members of some groups have an easier time associating human-linked emotions with their own groups than with others.
This does not mean that participants were doomed to a life of bias. 2023 first ightText Kirsten Morehouse e PhD ass="summaryFe Harvard University NxlGi">firs Hill pan> 61,000 ghLightText__NxlGi">the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 2012 Implicit Greek Morehouse Harvard Morehouse t Boston Marathon 2015 Blacks first eed_highLightTe Harvard Gi">U.S.
VR Score
87
Informative language
88
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39
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informal
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English
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60
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long-living
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