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Evidence for hypodescent and racial hierarchy in the categorization and perception of biracial individuals.

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2011

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American Psychological Association (APA)
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Ho, Arnold K., Jim Sidanius, Daniel T. Levin, and Mahzarin R. Banaji. 2011. “Evidence for Hypodescent and Racial Hierarchy in the Categorization and Perception of Biracial Individuals.” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 100, no. 3: 492–506.

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Abstract

Individuals who qualify equally for membership in two racial groups provide a rare window into social categorization and perception. In 5 experiments, we tested the extent to which a rule of hypodescent, whereby biracial individuals are assigned the status of their socially subordinate parent group, would govern perceptions of Asian–White and Black–White targets. In Experiment 1, in spite of posing explicit questions concerning Asian–White and Black–White targets, hypodescent was observed in both cases and more strongly in Black–White social categorization. Experiments 2A and 2B used a speeded response task and again revealed evidence of hypodescent in both cases, as well as a stronger effect in the Black–White target condition. In Experiments 3A and 3B, social perception was studied with a face-morphing task. Participants required a face to be lower in proportion minority to be perceived as minority than in proportion White to be perceived as White. Again, the threshold for being perceived as White was higher for Black–White than for Asian–White targets. An independent categorization task in Experiment 3B further confirmed the rule of hypodescent and variation in it that reflected the current racial hierarchy in the United States. These results documenting biases in the social categorization and perception of biracials have implications for resistance to change in the American racial hierarchy.

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hypodescent, race perception, social categorization, biracials, racial hierarchy

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Evidence for hypodescent and racial hierarchy… : DASH Story 2015-11-04
I am a British mixed heritage PhD student and wanted an interesting article on hypodescent and the way it is having a consequence on American culture and the way in which it is reported. I need a relevant American article because although we in Britain don't have hypodescence we do have a similar version embedded within black political and religious thought. I was delighted that the above article was freely shared. I could have got it through my university library but to access it like this means I will take time out to look for more articles by this author and cite their work in mine. Thank you.