Search This Blog

Translate

Monday, September 23, 2019

Nonverbal signals can create bias against larger groups

If children are exposed to bias against one person, will they develop a bias against that person’s entire group? The answer is yes, according to new research from University of Georgia social psychologist Allison Skinner. The study’s results are the first to demonstrate that nonverbal signals can produce new biases that generalize to entire groups and classes of people.

This study follows on the heels of her previously published work on the role of nonverbal signals in spreading attitudes and biases among adults. In a study published in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Skinner found that adults formed conscious attitudes toward an individual based on witnessing positive or negative nonverbal signals displayed toward that person. They also formed unconscious attitudes, but they were likely to misattribute the cause, according to Skinner.


Read the complete article from University of Georgia here: Nonverbal signals can create bias against larger groups