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Looking like a criminal: Stereotypical black facial features promote face source memory error
by
Kleider, Heather M.
, Knuycky, Leslie R.
, Cavrak, Sarah E.
in
Accuracy
/ Acknowledgment
/ Adolescent
/ Adult
/ African Americans
/ Aggressiveness
/ Behavior
/ Behavioral Science and Psychology
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Biometrics
/ Black or African American
/ Black People
/ Classification
/ Cognitive Psychology
/ Crime
/ Criminal sentences
/ Criminals
/ Criminals - classification
/ Errors
/ Face
/ Face (Body)
/ Face recognition
/ False alarms
/ False identification
/ Female
/ Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
/ Generalization, Stimulus - physiology
/ Human
/ Humans
/ Labeling
/ Learning. Memory
/ Male
/ Memory
/ Middle Aged
/ Offenders
/ Personality
/ Physical characteristics
/ Psychology
/ Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
/ Psychology. Psychophysiology
/ Race
/ Racial stereotypes
/ Recognition
/ Recognition, Psychology - physiology
/ Semantics
/ Social attribution, perception and cognition
/ Social Perception
/ Social psychology
/ Source memory
/ Stereotypes
/ Stereotyping
/ Studies
/ Violence
/ Violent crime
/ Witnesses
/ Young Adult
2012
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Looking like a criminal: Stereotypical black facial features promote face source memory error
by
Kleider, Heather M.
, Knuycky, Leslie R.
, Cavrak, Sarah E.
in
Accuracy
/ Acknowledgment
/ Adolescent
/ Adult
/ African Americans
/ Aggressiveness
/ Behavior
/ Behavioral Science and Psychology
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Biometrics
/ Black or African American
/ Black People
/ Classification
/ Cognitive Psychology
/ Crime
/ Criminal sentences
/ Criminals
/ Criminals - classification
/ Errors
/ Face
/ Face (Body)
/ Face recognition
/ False alarms
/ False identification
/ Female
/ Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
/ Generalization, Stimulus - physiology
/ Human
/ Humans
/ Labeling
/ Learning. Memory
/ Male
/ Memory
/ Middle Aged
/ Offenders
/ Personality
/ Physical characteristics
/ Psychology
/ Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
/ Psychology. Psychophysiology
/ Race
/ Racial stereotypes
/ Recognition
/ Recognition, Psychology - physiology
/ Semantics
/ Social attribution, perception and cognition
/ Social Perception
/ Social psychology
/ Source memory
/ Stereotypes
/ Stereotyping
/ Studies
/ Violence
/ Violent crime
/ Witnesses
/ Young Adult
2012
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Looking like a criminal: Stereotypical black facial features promote face source memory error
by
Kleider, Heather M.
, Knuycky, Leslie R.
, Cavrak, Sarah E.
in
Accuracy
/ Acknowledgment
/ Adolescent
/ Adult
/ African Americans
/ Aggressiveness
/ Behavior
/ Behavioral Science and Psychology
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Biometrics
/ Black or African American
/ Black People
/ Classification
/ Cognitive Psychology
/ Crime
/ Criminal sentences
/ Criminals
/ Criminals - classification
/ Errors
/ Face
/ Face (Body)
/ Face recognition
/ False alarms
/ False identification
/ Female
/ Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
/ Generalization, Stimulus - physiology
/ Human
/ Humans
/ Labeling
/ Learning. Memory
/ Male
/ Memory
/ Middle Aged
/ Offenders
/ Personality
/ Physical characteristics
/ Psychology
/ Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
/ Psychology. Psychophysiology
/ Race
/ Racial stereotypes
/ Recognition
/ Recognition, Psychology - physiology
/ Semantics
/ Social attribution, perception and cognition
/ Social Perception
/ Social psychology
/ Source memory
/ Stereotypes
/ Stereotyping
/ Studies
/ Violence
/ Violent crime
/ Witnesses
/ Young Adult
2012
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Looking like a criminal: Stereotypical black facial features promote face source memory error
Journal Article
Looking like a criminal: Stereotypical black facial features promote face source memory error
2012
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Overview
The present studies tested whether African American face type (stereotypical or nonstereotypical) facilitated stereotype-consistent categorization, and whether that categorization influenced memory accuracy and errors. Previous studies have shown that stereotypically Black features are associated with crime and violence (e.g., Blair, Judd, & Chapleau Psychological Science 15:674–679,
2004
; Blair, Judd, & Fallman Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 87:763–778,
2004
; Blair, Judd, Sadler, & Jenkins Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 83:5–25
2002
); here, we extended this finding to investigate whether there is a bias toward remembering and recategorizing stereotypical faces as criminals. Using category labels, consistent (or inconsistent) with race-based expectations, we tested whether face recognition and recategorization were driven by the similarity between a target’s facial features and a stereotyped category (i.e., stereotypical Black faces associated with crime/violence). The results revealed that stereotypical faces were associated more often with a stereotype-consistent label (Study 1), were remembered and correctly recategorized as criminals (Studies 2–4), and were miscategorized as criminals when memory failed. These effects occurred regardless of race or gender. Together, these findings suggest that face types have strong category associations that can promote stereotype-motivated recognition errors. Implications for eyewitness accuracy are discussed.
Publisher
Springer-Verlag,Springer,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
/ Adult
/ Behavior
/ Behavioral Science and Psychology
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Crime
/ Errors
/ Face
/ Female
/ Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
/ Generalization, Stimulus - physiology
/ Human
/ Humans
/ Labeling
/ Male
/ Memory
/ Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
/ Psychology. Psychophysiology
/ Race
/ Recognition, Psychology - physiology
/ Social attribution, perception and cognition
/ Studies
/ Violence
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