种族(生物学)
心理学
认知
表达式(计算机科学)
认知心理学
社会团体
自然(考古学)
语言学
社会心理学
计算机科学
社会学
性别研究
哲学
考古
神经科学
历史
程序设计语言
作者
Jessica Brough,Lasana T. Harris,Shi Hui Wu,Holly P. Branigan,Hugh Rabagliati
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41562-024-01943-3
摘要
Abstract Natural language contains and communicates social biases, often reflecting attitudes, prejudices and stereotypes. Here we provide evidence for a novel psychological pathway for the expression of such biases, in which they arise as a consequence of the automatized mechanisms by which humans retrieve words to produce sentences. Four experiments show that, when describing events, speakers tend to mention people who are more like them first and, thus, tend to highlight the perspectives of their own social groups. This ‘like me’ effect was seen in speakers from multiple demographic groups, in both English and Chinese speakers and in both first- and second-language English speakers. Psycholinguistic manipulations pinpoint that the bias is caused by greater accessibility in memory of words that refer to in-group than out-group members. These data provide a new cognitive explanation for why people produce biased language and highlight how detailed cognitive theories can have social implications.
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