Title
Stereotype-based modulation of person perception.
Abstract
A core social–psychological question is how cultural stereotypes shape our encounters with other people. While there is considerable evidence to suggest that unexpected targets—such as female airline pilots and male nurses—impact the inferential and memorial aspects of person construal, it has yet to be established if early perceptual operations are similarly sensitive to the stereotype-related status of individuals. To explore this issue, the current investigation measured neural activity while participants made social (i.e., sex categorization) and non-social (i.e., dot detection) judgments about men and women portrayed in expected and unexpected occupations. When participants categorized the stimuli according to sex, stereotype-inconsistent targets elicited increased activity in cortical areas associated with person perception and conflict resolution. Comparable effects did not emerge during a non-social judgment task. These findings begin to elucidate how and when stereotypic beliefs modulate the formation of person percepts in the brain.
Year
DOI
Venue
2011
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2011.05.004
NeuroImage
Keywords
Field
DocType
Person categorization,Processing goal,Stereotyping,Top-down modulation
Social perception,Developmental psychology,Categorization,Conflict resolution,Psychology,Neural activity,Cognitive psychology,Construal level theory,Stereotype,Stimulus (physiology),Perception
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
57
2
1053-8119
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
4
0.59
12
Authors
7
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Susanne Quadflieg1192.29
Natasha Flannigan240.59
G WAITER310913.63
Bruno Rossion426037.62
Gagan S Wig561.37
David J Turk64210.95
C. Neil Macrae713515.80