The impact of childhood experience on amygdala response to perceptually familiar black and white faces.

Jasmin Cloutier, Tianyi Li, Joshua Correll
Author Information
  1. Jasmin Cloutier: University of Chicago.

Abstract

Given the well-documented involvement of the amygdala in race perception, the current study aimed to investigate how interracial contact during childhood shapes amygdala response to racial outgroup members in adulthood. Of particular interest was the impact of childhood experience on amygdala response to familiar, compared with novel, Black faces. Controlling for a number of well-established individual difference measures related to interracial attitudes, the results reveal that perceivers with greater childhood exposure to racial outgroup members display greater relative reduction in amygdala response to familiar Black faces. The implications of such findings are discussed in the context of previous investigations into the neural substrates of race perception and in consideration of potential mechanisms by which childhood experience may shape race perception.

MeSH Term

Adult
Amygdala
Analysis of Variance
Attitude
Brain Mapping
Face
Female
Humans
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
Individuality
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Oxygen
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Photic Stimulation
Psychology, Child
Race Relations
Recognition, Psychology
Surveys and Questionnaires
Young Adult

Chemicals

Oxygen

Word Cloud

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