Authors
Robert Kurzban, John Tooby, Leda Cosmides
Publication date
2001/12/18
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
98
Issue
26
Pages
15387-15392
Publisher
The National Academy of Sciences
Description
Previous studies have established that people encode the race of each individual they encounter, and do so via computational processes that appear to be both automatic and mandatory. If true, this conclusion would be important, because categorizing others by their race is a precondition for treating them differently according to race. Here we report experiments, using unobtrusive measures, showing that categorizing individuals by race is not inevitable, and supporting an alternative hypothesis: that encoding by race is instead a reversible byproduct of cognitive machinery that evolved to detect coalitional alliances. The results show that subjects encode coalitional affiliations as a normal part of person representation. More importantly, when cues of coalitional affiliation no longer track or correspond to race, subjects markedly reduce the extent to which they categorize others by race, and indeed may cease …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Kurzban, J Tooby, L Cosmides - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001