Rehumanizing the homeless: Altered BOLD response following contact with an extreme outgroup
Rehumanizing the homeless: Altered BOLD response following contact with an extreme outgroup
Abstract Dehumanized perception strips people of their humanity by ignoring their mental states. Evidence has accumulated to suggest many individuals do not spontaneously attribute mental states towards certain social groups, such as the homeless, and drug-addicted (Fiske et al., 2002, Harris & Fiske, 2006; 2007; 2011). These groups tend to elicit differential BOLD signal within areas associated with social cognition. To investigate the versatility of this response, two experiments were conducted: a mixed design study (20 participants); and a repeated-measures design (11 participants). These investigated the malleability of social cognition following a contact intervention with the homeless. Both experiments had participants make emotional judgements toward eight different social groups whilst under fMRI. The two studies found mixed evidence, demonstrating altered response to homeless people in regions such as the mPFC, Insula, IPL, and MTG following social contact. This lends some support to the use of contact as an effective intervention.
Cohen A. O.、Sinnott-Armstrong W.、Kirk P. A.、Harris L.T.
NYU Department of Psychology, New York UniversityKenan Institute of Ethics, Duke UniversityInstitute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College LondonDepartment of Experimental Psychology, University College London
科学、科学研究神经病学、精神病学人类学
DehumanizationContactSocial CognitionfMRI
Cohen A. O.,Sinnott-Armstrong W.,Kirk P. A.,Harris L.T..Rehumanizing the homeless: Altered BOLD response following contact with an extreme outgroup[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-28].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/462671.点此复制
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