cover image: Uncovering Implicit Racial Bias in the Brain: The Past, Present & Future - Jennifer T. Kubota

20.500.12592/pzgmzhn

Uncovering Implicit Racial Bias in the Brain: The Past, Present & Future - Jennifer T. Kubota

20 Feb 2024

The Future: Skepticism and What Is on the Horizon for Neuroscience Research of Implicit Bias Although neuroscience and social psychology have provided essential insights into implicit bias’s origins, production, and consequences, the field of implicit bias has faced criticism. [...] Kubota is a Senior Ford Fellow and an Associate Professor in the De- partments of Psychological and Brain Sciences and Political Science and Interna- tional Relations at the University of Delaware. [...] She codirects the Impression For- mation Social Neuroscience Lab and is the Director for Equity and Inclusion in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences. [...] She is also the Chair of the Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, and Justice Committee for the Social and Affective Neuroscience Society, an Associate Editor at the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and an Editorial Board member at Scientific Reports. [...] 47 Mattan, Wei, Cloutier, and Kubota, “The Social Neuroscience of Race- and Status-Based Prejudice”; Kubota, Banaji, and Phelps, “The Neuroscience of Race”; Amodio, “The Neuroscience of Prejudice and Stereotyping”; and Amodio and Cikara, “The Social Neuroscience of Prejudice.” 48 Cloutier, Kelley, and Heatherton, “The Influence of Perceptual and Knowledge-Based Fa- miliarity on the Neural Substrat.
Pages
22
Published in
United States of America