“Yuck, You Disgust Me!” Affective Bias Against Interracial Couples

ArticleinJournal of Experimental Social Psychology 68:68-77 · January 2017with1,099 Reads
DOI: 10.1016/j.jesp.2016.05.008
Allison L. Skinner at Northwestern University
  • 19.32
  • Northwestern University
Caitlin M Hudac at University of Washington Seattle
  • 25.43
  • University of Washington Seattle
Abstract
The current research expands upon the sparse existing literature on the nature of bias against interracial couples. Study 1 demonstrates that bias against interracial romance is correlated with disgust. Study 2 provides evidence that images of interracial couples evoke a neural disgust response among observers – as indicated by increased insula activation relative to images of same-race couples. Consistent with psychological theory indicating that disgust leads to dehumanization, Study 3 demonstrates that manipulating disgust leads to implicit dehumanization of interracial couples. Overall, the current findings provide evidence that interracial couples elicit disgust and are dehumanized relative to same-race couples. These findings are particularly concerning, given evidence of antisocial reactions (e.g., aggression, perpetration of violence) to dehumanized targets. Findings also highlight the role of meaningful social units (e.g., couples) in person perception, an important consideration for psychologists conducting social cognition research.

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