Individuals with other-race friends are perceived to identify less strongly with their racial in-group than are individuals with same-race friends. Using the reverse-correlation technique, we show that this effect goes beyond perceptions of social identification, influencing how people are mentally represented. In four studies with Black and White American participants, we demonstrate a "racial assimilation effect": Participants, independent of their own race, represented both Black and White targets with other-race friends as phenotypically more similar to the respective racial out-group. Representations of targets with racial out-group friends were subsequently rated as more likely to engage in social action supportive of the racial out-group. Out-group targets with other-race friends were represented more favorably than out-group targets with mostly same-race friends. White participants had particularly negative representations of in-group members with mostly Black friends. The present research suggests that individuals' social networks influence how their race and associated traits are mentally represented.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/01461672211024118 | DOI Listing |
JAMA Ophthalmol
May 2024
Johns Hopkins Disability Health Research Center, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
Importance: Telehealth has the potential to improve health for older adults, but many access disparities exist, including for those with vision impairment (VI).
Objective: To examine the associations between VI and digital technology access measures in US older adults.
Design, Setting, And Participants: This was a cross-sectional study that included Medicare beneficiaries 65 years and older.
Strong ethnic identity is recognized as a protective factor against body image concern and eating pathology in Black women as they tend to hold cultural values in line with an acceptance of a variety of body shapes and sizes. Reinforcement of these cultural ideals may occur via same-race peer relationships. The current study examined the mediating role of same-race versus other-race peers in the relationship between ethnic identity and body appreciation in Black women.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
December 2023
Neurosurgery, Desert Regional Medical Center, Palm Springs, USA.
Background Disparities have been found in the utilization of palliative care (PC). However, a limitation of existing research is that it co-mingles factors affecting whether a patient is offered PC with factors affecting whether a patient accepts/refuses PC. Our objective is to identify the determinants and disparities of neurosurgery patients accepting/refusing inpatient PC after a provider recommends an inpatient PC consult.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Youth Adolesc
April 2023
School of Integrative Studies, Human Development and Family Science, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA.
Despite a robust volume of evidence documenting adverse effects of racial discrimination experiences on adolescent adjustment outcomes, relatively little is known about the relational consequences of racial discrimination experiences for adolescent friendship networks. To address this gap, this study examines how racial discrimination experiences shape and are shaped by friendship network dynamics in early and middle adolescence. The current study's goals were to explicate whether relational consequences of racial discrimination experiences for friendship network selection differed between interracial and intraracial friendships among Black and Latinx youth, and how these adolescents were influenced by their friends' racial discrimination experiences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcad Pediatr
August 2023
MassGeneral Hospital for Children (S Cohen, JH Chou, L Sarathy, and DM Schiff), Boston, Mass.
Objective: To evaluate for disparities in peripartum toxicology testing among maternal-infant dyads across a hospital network and subsequent child protective services (CPS) involvement.
Methods: Retrospective chart review of 59,425 deliveries at 5 hospitals in Massachusetts between 2016 and 2020. We evaluated associations between maternal characteristics, toxicology testing, and child welfare involvement with disproportionality risk ratios and hierarchical logistical regression.
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