婴儿对自己种族和其他种族面孔的视觉注意力受到日常生活中与不同种族的人相处的经验的调节。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-23 DOI:10.1037/xge0001492
Sophie H Arnold, Nicole Burke, Rachel A Leshin, Marjorie Rhodes
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引用次数: 0

摘要

婴儿有时会对不同种族的面孔表现出不同的态度,但这种倾向在婴儿期是如何发展的,以及在不同种族多样性环境中长大的婴儿的这种倾向可能会如何变化,目前尚不清楚。本研究通过对来自世界各地的婴儿(N=203;Mage=6.9个月,范围=3-14个月;70%白人,8%亚裔,5%黑人,12%多种族,4%未报告;14%西班牙裔,86%非西班牙牙裔)的大规模研究,检验了种族多样性经历对婴儿在出生第一年对不同种族群体(特别是本种族与其他种族群体)的视觉注意力的影响美国我们测试了两种形式的种族多样性的作用:婴儿的社交网络(由父母报告)和婴儿的社区(从美国人口普查数据中获得)。无论年龄大小,婴儿看其他种族面孔的时间都比看自己种族的面孔的时间长,但这种趋势受到婴儿社交网络种族多样性的调节。网络更加多样化的婴儿对自己的种族和其他种族面孔的观察时间相当长,而网络不那么多样化的婴儿则对其他种族面孔观察时间更长。相比之下,婴儿的长相行为并没有受到社区多样性的影响。总之,我们的研究表明,在婴儿直接的社交网络中接触种族多样性可以预测婴儿对不同种族面孔的看法,这说明了婴儿对种族注意力发展的上下文依赖性。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Infants' visual attention to own-race and other-race faces is moderated by experience with people of different races in their daily lives.

Infants sometimes differentially attend to faces of different races, but how this tendency develops across infancy and how it may vary for infants growing up with different exposure to racial diversity remain unclear. The present study examined the role of experiences with racial diversity on infants' visual attention to different racial groups (specifically own-race vs. other-race groups) in the first year of life via a large-scale study of infants (N = 203; Mage = 6.9 months, range = 3-14 months; 70% White, 8% Asian, 5% Black, 12% multiracial, 4% unreported; 14% Hispanic, 86% non-Hispanic) from across the United States. We tested the role of two forms of racial diversity: that of infants' social networks (reported by parents) and that of infants' neighborhoods (obtained from U.S. Census data). Regardless of age, infants looked longer at other-race faces than own-race faces, but this tendency was moderated by the racial diversity of infants' social networks. Infants with more diverse networks looked equivalently long at own-race and other-race faces, whereas those with less diverse networks looked longer at other-race faces. In contrast, infants' looking behavior was not moderated by the diversity of their neighborhoods. Together, our research suggests that exposure to racial diversity in infants' immediate social networks predicts how infants look to faces of different races, illustrating the context-dependent nature of the development of infants' attention to race. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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