Categorising intersectional targets: An "either/and" approach to race- and gender-emotion congruity

scientific article published on 15 September 2015

Categorising intersectional targets: An "either/and" approach to race- and gender-emotion congruity is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1080/02699931.2015.1081875
P698PubMed publication ID26371750
P5875ResearchGate publication ID282035954

P2093author name stringJohn F Dovidio
Marianne LaFrance
Jacqueline S Smith
P2860cites workOn the universality and cultural specificity of emotion recognition: a meta-analysisQ28212643
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Multiple Cues in Social Perception: The Time Course of Processing Race and Facial ExpressionQ36076286
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Facial resemblance to emotions: group differences, impression effects, and race stereotypesQ36915860
Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective AttentionQ37078681
IMAGES OF BLACK AMERICANS: Then, "Them," and Now, "Obama!"Q37301110
Treating stimuli as a random factor in social psychology: a new and comprehensive solution to a pervasive but largely ignored problem.Q38011789
Evidence for racial prejudice at the implicit level and its relationship with questionnaire measuresQ38457405
Lost in the categorical shuffle: evidence for the social non-prototypicality of black womenQ39210255
Development of a FACS-verified set of basic and self-conscious emotion expressionsQ39958021
Attentional Bias for Threat: Evidence for Delayed Disengagement from Emotional FacesQ42120985
The confounded nature of angry men and happy womenQ45198719
Social categorization and the perception of facial affect: target race moderates the response latency advantage for happy facesQ46176328
Race is gendered: how covarying phenotypes and stereotypes bias sex categorizationQ46194752
Gendered races: implications for interracial marriage, leadership selection, and athletic participationQ46505990
The effect of poser race on the happy categorization advantage depends on stimulus type, set size, and presentation durationQ46888798
Ambiguity in social categorization: The role of prejudice and facial affect in race categorizationQ46902033
The processing of invariant and variant face cues in the Garner Paradigm.Q50624473
Face gender and emotion expression: are angry women more like men?Q50712813
Symmetrical interaction of sex and expression in face classification tasks.Q50751410
Facing prejudice: implicit prejudice and the perception of facial threat.Q51014162
Laterality for facial expressions: does the sex of the subject interact with the sex of the stimulus face?Q51141852
The dissection of selection in person perception: inhibitory processes in social stereotyping.Q52206421
Stereotypes as energy-saving devices: A peek inside the cognitive toolboxQ57255305
P433issue1
P304page(s)83-97
P577publication date2015-09-15
P1433published inCognition and EmotionQ15749526
P1476titleCategorising intersectional targets: An "either/and" approach to race- and gender-emotion congruity
P478volume31

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q39450049Facading in transcultural interactions: examples from pediatric cancer care in Sweden
Q91867699The Effects of Facial Attractiveness and Familiarity on Facial Expression Recognition
Q87998363When a face type is perceived as threatening: Using general recognition theory to understand biased categorization of Afrocentric faces

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