Multidimensional Approach to Implicit Bias and the Underlying Cognitive Mechanism

abstract: Social categories such as race and gender are associated by people with certain characteristics (e.g. males are angry), which unconsciously affects how people evaluate and react to a person of specific social categories. This phenomenon, referred to as implicit bias, has been the interest...

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Other Authors: Rheem, Hansol (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55656
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-556562020-01-15T03:01:14Z Multidimensional Approach to Implicit Bias and the Underlying Cognitive Mechanism abstract: Social categories such as race and gender are associated by people with certain characteristics (e.g. males are angry), which unconsciously affects how people evaluate and react to a person of specific social categories. This phenomenon, referred to as implicit bias, has been the interest of many social psychologists. However, the implicit bias research has been focusing on only one social category at a time, despite humans being entities of multiple social categories. The research also neglects the behavioral contexts in which implicit biases are triggered and rely on a broad definition for the locus of the bias regulation mechanism. These limitations raise questions on whether the current bias reduction strategies are effective. The current dissertation sought to address these limitations by introducing an ecologically valid and multidimensional method. In Chapters 1 and 2, the mouse-tracking task was integrated into the implicit association task to examine how implicit biases were moderated in different behavioral contexts. The results demonstrated that the manifestation of implicit biases depended on the behavioral context as well as the distinctive identity created by the combinations of different social categories. Chapter 3 laid groundwork for testing working memory as the processing capacity for the bias regulation mechanism. The result suggested that the hand-motion tracking indices of working memory load could be used to infer the capacity of an individual to suppress the influence of implicit bias. In Chapter 4, the mouse-tracking paradigm was integrated into the Stroop task with implicit associations serving as the Stroop targets. The implicit associations produced various effects including the conflict adaptation effect, like the Stroop targets, which suggested that implicit associations and Stroop stimuli are handled by overlapping cognitive mechanisms. Throughout these efforts, the current dissertation, first, demonstrated that a more ecologically valid and multidimensional approach is required to understand biased behaviors in detail. Furthermore, the current dissertation suggested the cognitive control mechanism as a finer definition for the locus of the bias regulation mechanism, which could be leveraged to offer solutions that are more adaptive and effective in the environment where collaboration and harmony are more important than ever. Dissertation/Thesis Rheem, Hansol (Author) Becker, D. Vaughn (Advisor) Craig, Scotty D. (Committee member) Gutzwiller, Robert S. (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Psychology Cognitive psychology Social psychology Bias regulation Cognitive control Implicit association task Implicit bias Intersection of social categories Mouse-tracking eng 174 pages Doctoral Dissertation Human Systems Engineering 2019 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55656 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
Cognitive psychology
Social psychology
Bias regulation
Cognitive control
Implicit association task
Implicit bias
Intersection of social categories
Mouse-tracking
spellingShingle Psychology
Cognitive psychology
Social psychology
Bias regulation
Cognitive control
Implicit association task
Implicit bias
Intersection of social categories
Mouse-tracking
Multidimensional Approach to Implicit Bias and the Underlying Cognitive Mechanism
description abstract: Social categories such as race and gender are associated by people with certain characteristics (e.g. males are angry), which unconsciously affects how people evaluate and react to a person of specific social categories. This phenomenon, referred to as implicit bias, has been the interest of many social psychologists. However, the implicit bias research has been focusing on only one social category at a time, despite humans being entities of multiple social categories. The research also neglects the behavioral contexts in which implicit biases are triggered and rely on a broad definition for the locus of the bias regulation mechanism. These limitations raise questions on whether the current bias reduction strategies are effective. The current dissertation sought to address these limitations by introducing an ecologically valid and multidimensional method. In Chapters 1 and 2, the mouse-tracking task was integrated into the implicit association task to examine how implicit biases were moderated in different behavioral contexts. The results demonstrated that the manifestation of implicit biases depended on the behavioral context as well as the distinctive identity created by the combinations of different social categories. Chapter 3 laid groundwork for testing working memory as the processing capacity for the bias regulation mechanism. The result suggested that the hand-motion tracking indices of working memory load could be used to infer the capacity of an individual to suppress the influence of implicit bias. In Chapter 4, the mouse-tracking paradigm was integrated into the Stroop task with implicit associations serving as the Stroop targets. The implicit associations produced various effects including the conflict adaptation effect, like the Stroop targets, which suggested that implicit associations and Stroop stimuli are handled by overlapping cognitive mechanisms. Throughout these efforts, the current dissertation, first, demonstrated that a more ecologically valid and multidimensional approach is required to understand biased behaviors in detail. Furthermore, the current dissertation suggested the cognitive control mechanism as a finer definition for the locus of the bias regulation mechanism, which could be leveraged to offer solutions that are more adaptive and effective in the environment where collaboration and harmony are more important than ever. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Human Systems Engineering 2019
author2 Rheem, Hansol (Author)
author_facet Rheem, Hansol (Author)
title Multidimensional Approach to Implicit Bias and the Underlying Cognitive Mechanism
title_short Multidimensional Approach to Implicit Bias and the Underlying Cognitive Mechanism
title_full Multidimensional Approach to Implicit Bias and the Underlying Cognitive Mechanism
title_fullStr Multidimensional Approach to Implicit Bias and the Underlying Cognitive Mechanism
title_full_unstemmed Multidimensional Approach to Implicit Bias and the Underlying Cognitive Mechanism
title_sort multidimensional approach to implicit bias and the underlying cognitive mechanism
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55656
_version_ 1719308544765853696