J
Consult Clin Psychol 1999 Jun;67(3):387-93
Conscious and nonconscious African American stereotypes: impact on first
impression and diagnostic ratings by therapists.
Abreu JM.
Division of Counseling Psychology, University of Southern California,
School of Education, Los Angeles 90089-0031, USA. abreu@mizar.usc.edu
Sixty therapists randomly assigned to 1 of 2 priming conditions were
primed with African American stereotypes or neutral words using 80-ms
flash words on a computer screen. This procedure may activate information
processing outside of conscious awareness. After this task, participants
were exposed to a brief vignette introducing Mr. X, a patient referred
for treatment, and then were asked to rate Mr. X on various dimensions.
Results indicate that participants primed with stereotype words rated
Mr. X significantly less favorably on hostility-related attributes and
significantly more favorably on hostility-unrelated attributes than did
participants primed with neutral words. The findings suggest that therapists
can be affected by African American stereotypes in ways that produce negative
or positive first impressions depending on the nature of the attribute
that is rated.
Publication Types: Clinical Trial; Randomized Controlled Trial
PMID: 10369059 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]