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Neuroscience of Prejudice and Intergroup Relations
DOI link for Neuroscience of Prejudice and Intergroup Relations
Neuroscience of Prejudice and Intergroup Relations book
Neuroscience of Prejudice and Intergroup Relations
DOI link for Neuroscience of Prejudice and Intergroup Relations
Neuroscience of Prejudice and Intergroup Relations book
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ABSTRACT
Psychological research on the origins and consequences of prejudice, discrimination, and stereotyping has moved into previously uncharted directions through the introduction of neuroscientific measures. Psychologists can now address issues that are difficult to examine with traditional methodologies and monitor motivational and emotional as they develop during ongoing intergroup interactions, thus enabling the empirical investigation of the fundamental biological bases of prejudice.
However, several very promising strands of research have largely developed independently of each other. By bringing together the work of leading prejudice researchers from across the world who have begun to study this field with different neuroscientific tools, this volume provides the first integrated view on the specific drawbacks and benefits of each type of measure, illuminates how standard paradigms in research on prejudice and intergroup relations can be adapted for the use of neuroscientific methods, and illustrates how different methodologies can complement each other and be combined to advance current insights into the nature of prejudice.
This cutting-edge volume will be of interest to advanced undergraduates, graduates, and researchers students who study prejudice, intergroup relations, and social neuroscience.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter 1|22 pages
The “Nature” of Prejudice: What Neuroscience has to Offer to the Study of Intergroup Relations
part |2 pages
PART I Categorization and In-group Favoritism
chapter 2|20 pages
Imaging the Pictures in Our Heads: Using ERPs to Inform Our Understanding of Social Categorization
chapter 3|18 pages
The Implicit Effects of Social Identity: Measuring Early Social Categorization with Event-related Brain Potentials
chapter 4|24 pages
Oxytocinergic Circuitry Motivates Intragroup Cooperation and Intergroup Competition
part |2 pages
PART II Person Perception and Stereotyping
chapter 5|21 pages
Scanning for Scholars: How Neuro-imaging the MPFC Provides Converging Evidence for Interpersonal Stratification
chapter 6|20 pages
Social Identity Shapes Social Perception and Evaluation: Using Neuroimaging to Look Inside the Social Brain
chapter 7|16 pages
The Role of Memory Consolidation during Sleep in Social Perception and Stereotyping
chapter 8|19 pages
Heart Rate and Heart Rate Variability Responses to Stereotype Activation among Non-stereotyped Individuals: Stereotype Lift in the Motor Domain
part |2 pages
PART III Overcoming Implicit Prejudice
chapter 9|23 pages
Implicit Prejudice and the Regulation of Intergroup Responses:Theoretical Contributions of the Social Neuroscience Approach
chapter 10|19 pages
Event-related Brain Potentials and the Role of Cognitive Control in Implicit Race Bias
chapter 11|18 pages
Moral Accountability and Prejudice Control: Evidence from Cardiovascular and EEG Responses
part |2 pages
PART IV Coping with Prejudice and Identity Threat
chapter 12|14 pages
The Biopsychosocial Model of Challenge and Threat: Reflections,Theoretical Ubiquity, and New Directions
chapter 13|17 pages
Studying Social Identity-based Threats and Challenges Using Cardiovascular Measures
chapter 14|17 pages
Physiological and Self-report Measures of Stress and Coping in the Study of Stigma
part |2 pages
PART V Intergroup Interactions