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Journal Article
Learning (not) to talk about race: When older children underperform in social categorization
Developmental Psychology
Author(s)
The present research identifies an anomaly in sociocognitive development, whereby younger children (8 and 9 years) outperform their older counterparts (10 and 11 years) in a basic categorization task in which the acknowledgment of racial difference facilitates performance. Though older children exhibit superior performance on a race-neutral version of the task, their tendency to avoid acknowledging race hinders objective success when race is a relevant category. That these findings emerge in late childhood, in a pattern counter to the normal developmental trajectory of increased cognitive expertise in categorization, suggests that this anomaly indicates the onset of a critical transition in human social development.
Date Published:
2008
Citations:
Apfelbaum, Evan, Kristin Pauker, Nalini Ambady, Samuel Sommers, Michael Norton. 2008. Learning (not) to talk about race: When older children underperform in social categorization. Developmental Psychology. 1513-1518.