skin and bones the contribution of skin tone and facial structure to racial prototypicality ratings皮肤和骨头的贡献种族肤色和面部结构prototypicality评级.pdf
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Skin and Bones: The Contribution of Skin Tone and Facial
Structure to Racial Prototypicality Ratings
1 1 1 1 2
Michael A. Strom , Leslie A. Zebrowitz *, Shunan Zhang , P. Matthew Bronstad , Hoon Koo Lee
1 Department of Psychology, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, United States of America, 2 Department of Psychology, Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea
Abstract
Previous research reveals that a more ‘African’ appearance has significant social consequences, yielding more negative first
impressions and harsher criminal sentencing of Black or White individuals. This study is the first to systematically assess the
relative contribution of skin tone and facial metrics to White, Black, and Korean perceivers’ ratings of the racial
prototypicality of faces from the same three groups. Our results revealed that the relative contribution of metrics and skin
tone depended on both perceiver race and face race. White perceivers’ racial prototypicality ratings were less responsive to
variations in skin tone than were Black or Korean perceivers’ ratings. White perceivers ratings’ also were more responsive to
facial metrics than to skin tone, while the reverse was true for Black perceivers. Additionally, across all perceiver groups, skin
tone had a more consistent impact than metrics on racial prototypicality ratings of White faces, with the reverse for Korean
faces. For Black faces, the relative impact varied with perceiver race: skin tone had a more consistent impact than metrics for
Black and Korean perceivers, with the reverse for White perceivers. These results have significant implications for predicting
who will experience racial prototypicality biases and from whom.
Citation: Strom MA, Zebrowitz LA,
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