Identifying Racial Minorities' Nationality: Non-verbal Accent as a Cue to Cultural Group Membership

Historically, racial appearance has been a common source of information upon which we categorize others, as have verbal accents. Enculturated non-verbal accents which are detected in facial expressions of emotion, hairstyle, and everyday behaviors, have also been found to exist. We investigated the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yvette D. Alcott, Susan E. Watt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.608581/full
id doaj-ebf3b5efe5dd42cc996ff233a60e0003
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ebf3b5efe5dd42cc996ff233a60e00032021-06-17T10:53:14ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782021-06-011210.3389/fpsyg.2021.608581608581Identifying Racial Minorities' Nationality: Non-verbal Accent as a Cue to Cultural Group MembershipYvette D. AlcottSusan E. WattHistorically, racial appearance has been a common source of information upon which we categorize others, as have verbal accents. Enculturated non-verbal accents which are detected in facial expressions of emotion, hairstyle, and everyday behaviors, have also been found to exist. We investigated the effects of non-verbal accent on categorization and stereotyping when people are exposed to thin slices of behavior. The effects of racial essentialism, which inclines people to categorize and assess others by race, were also tested. In three studies, Australian participants were shown short, muted videos of target individuals performing everyday behaviors. The targets were of a minority (Asian) racial appearance, but half had been interracially adopted as babies and grew up in the Australian mainstream. The other half were foreign nationals who grew up in Asia. In Studies 1 and 2, Australian participants rated each target as Australian or foreign. In both studies, they correctly identified the targets at above chance levels. In Study 3, participants rated the targets on Australian and Asian stereotype traits. They were not told that some targets were Australian and some were foreign, but they nonetheless rated the congruent stereotypes more strongly. Lay theory of race moderated the effect of non-verbal accent, with a weaker effect among participants who endorsed racial essentialism. These preliminary findings reveal subtle effects of non-verbal accent as a cue to cultural group membership and invite further work into the effects of non-verbal accent on person perception and categorization processes.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.608581/fullnon-verbal accentstereotypesenculturationthin slices of behaviorimpression formation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yvette D. Alcott
Susan E. Watt
spellingShingle Yvette D. Alcott
Susan E. Watt
Identifying Racial Minorities' Nationality: Non-verbal Accent as a Cue to Cultural Group Membership
Frontiers in Psychology
non-verbal accent
stereotypes
enculturation
thin slices of behavior
impression formation
author_facet Yvette D. Alcott
Susan E. Watt
author_sort Yvette D. Alcott
title Identifying Racial Minorities' Nationality: Non-verbal Accent as a Cue to Cultural Group Membership
title_short Identifying Racial Minorities' Nationality: Non-verbal Accent as a Cue to Cultural Group Membership
title_full Identifying Racial Minorities' Nationality: Non-verbal Accent as a Cue to Cultural Group Membership
title_fullStr Identifying Racial Minorities' Nationality: Non-verbal Accent as a Cue to Cultural Group Membership
title_full_unstemmed Identifying Racial Minorities' Nationality: Non-verbal Accent as a Cue to Cultural Group Membership
title_sort identifying racial minorities' nationality: non-verbal accent as a cue to cultural group membership
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Historically, racial appearance has been a common source of information upon which we categorize others, as have verbal accents. Enculturated non-verbal accents which are detected in facial expressions of emotion, hairstyle, and everyday behaviors, have also been found to exist. We investigated the effects of non-verbal accent on categorization and stereotyping when people are exposed to thin slices of behavior. The effects of racial essentialism, which inclines people to categorize and assess others by race, were also tested. In three studies, Australian participants were shown short, muted videos of target individuals performing everyday behaviors. The targets were of a minority (Asian) racial appearance, but half had been interracially adopted as babies and grew up in the Australian mainstream. The other half were foreign nationals who grew up in Asia. In Studies 1 and 2, Australian participants rated each target as Australian or foreign. In both studies, they correctly identified the targets at above chance levels. In Study 3, participants rated the targets on Australian and Asian stereotype traits. They were not told that some targets were Australian and some were foreign, but they nonetheless rated the congruent stereotypes more strongly. Lay theory of race moderated the effect of non-verbal accent, with a weaker effect among participants who endorsed racial essentialism. These preliminary findings reveal subtle effects of non-verbal accent as a cue to cultural group membership and invite further work into the effects of non-verbal accent on person perception and categorization processes.
topic non-verbal accent
stereotypes
enculturation
thin slices of behavior
impression formation
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.608581/full
work_keys_str_mv AT yvettedalcott identifyingracialminoritiesnationalitynonverbalaccentasacuetoculturalgroupmembership
AT susanewatt identifyingracialminoritiesnationalitynonverbalaccentasacuetoculturalgroupmembership
_version_ 1721374127788392448