scholarly journals Contagious Anxiety: Anxious European Americans Can Transmit Their Physiological Reactivity to African Americans

2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (12) ◽  
pp. 1796-1806 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tessa V. West ◽  
Katrina Koslov ◽  
Elizabeth Page-Gould ◽  
Brenda Major ◽  
Wendy Berry Mendes

During interracial encounters, well-intentioned European Americans sometimes engage in subtle displays of anxiety, which can be interpreted as signs of racial bias by African American partners. In the present research, same-race and cross-race stranger dyads ( N = 123) engaged in getting-acquainted tasks, during which measures of sympathetic nervous system responses (preejection period, PEP) and heart rate variability were continuously collected. PEP scores showed that African American partners had stronger physiological linkage to European American partners who evidenced greater anxiety—greater cortisol reactivity, behavioral tension, and self-reported discomfort—which suggests greater physiological responsiveness to momentary changes in partners’ affective states when those partners were anxious. European Americans showed physiological linkage to African American and European American partners, but linkage did not vary as a function of their partner’s anxiety. Using physiological linkage offers a novel approach to understanding how affective responses unfold during dynamic intergroup interactions.

2004 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 203-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher J. Ferguson ◽  
Charles Negy

Using an experimental analog design, in this study we examined 503 European American, African American, and Latino undergraduate students’ responses to a domestic violence scenario in which the ethnicity and gender of the perpetrator were manipulated. Results indicated that participants perceived perpetration of domestic assault significantly more criminal when committed by a man than when committed by a woman. That finding was robust across European Americans, African Americans, and Latinos and was expressed by both genders. Also, European American participants expressed significantly more criticism toward African American perpetrators of assault than they did toward European American and Latino perpetrators of the exact offense, suggestive of racial bias consistent with stereotypes about African Americans being excessively aggressive. Finally, Latino participants expressed significantly more sympathy toward women who assault their husbands than toward assaulting husbands. Implications of the findings are discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 349-356
Author(s):  
L. Jerome Brandon ◽  
Larry D. Proctor

Objectives: The purpose of this study was to determine if central anthropometric vari­ables that best estimate blood pressure risks in European Americans also best estimate blood pressure risks in African Americans.Design: The participants were 357 nor­motensive African and European American volunteers with a mean age of 32.6 ± 12.4 years. Participants were evaluated for central adiposity with dual energy X-ray ab­sorptiometry, abdomen and thigh skinfolds, waist and hip circumferences, waist/hip ratio, waist/height ratio, body mass index, and systolic and diastolic blood pressures. Descriptive statistics, partial correlations, ANOVA and stepwise regressions were used to analyze the data.Results: Central adiposity anthropometric indices made different contributions to blood pressure in African and European American men and women. When weight was held constant, waist circumference shared stronger partial relationships with blood pressure in African Americans (r = .30 to .47) than in European Americans (r = .11 to .32). Waist circumference in com­bination with other indices was a predictor of systolic and diastolic blood pressures in European American men (P<.05) but only a predictor for diastolic blood pressure in African American men and women (P<.01). Hip circumference was the only predic­tor for systolic blood pressure (P<.01) in African American men and women.Conclusions: Further research on the rela­tive contributions of central anthropometric indices to blood pressure in African and European Americans is warranted. A better understanding of this relationship may help reduce hypertensive morbidity and mortali­ty disparities between African and European Americans. Ethn Dis. 2020;30(2):349-356; doi:10.18865/ed.30.2.349


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (21-22) ◽  
pp. 4327-4349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Sung Hong ◽  
Bee Ryou ◽  
Alex R. Piquero

Patterns of—and correlates associated with—bullying perpetration and peer victimization have received widespread research attention. Somewhat less research has considered how protective factors in the parental domain help to buffer against both adverse behaviors. And perhaps more importantly, even less research has considered potential racial differences in the manner in which family-level variables relate to both bullying perpetration and peer victimization. Using a nationwide sample of adolescents, the present study examines (a) how parent/guardian support, mother’s parental monitoring, father’s parental monitoring, and family satisfaction buffer against bullying perpetration and peer victimization; and (b) whether these relationships vary across race. Data are derived from the 2009 to 2010 Health Behavior in School-Aged Children study in the United States. A total of 8,998 adolescents were included in the study sample, which consisted of 6,521 European Americans and 2,477 African Americans. Findings show that both European American and African American youth who received parental/guardian support were less likely to report being bullied. Among both African American and European American sub-samples, results showed that mother’s parental monitoring was negatively associated with both bullying perpetration and peer victimization. Father’s parental monitoring was negatively associated with peer victimization and bullying perpetration for European Americans only. Both European and African American youth who reported being satisfied with their family were less likely to report being bullied while European American youth who reported higher family satisfaction were less likely to engage in bullying. In sum, several family variables help to buffer against both bullying perpetration and peer victimization, but for the most part these relationships are race-invariant.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-27
Author(s):  
Marie Bissell ◽  
Walt Wolfram

This study considers the dynamic trajectory of the back-vowel fronting of the BOOT and BOAT vowels for 27 speakers in a unique, longstanding context of a substantive, tri-ethnic contact situation involving American Indians, European Americans, and African Americans over three disparate generations in Robeson County, North Carolina. The results indicate that the earlier status of Lumbee English fronting united them with the African American vowel system, particularly for the BOOT vowel, but that more recent generations have shifted towards alignment with European American speakers. Given the biracial Southeastern U.S. that historically identified Lumbee Indians as “free persons of color” and the persistent skepticism about the Lumbee Indians as merely a mixed group of European Americans and African Americans, the movement away from the African American pattern towards the European American pattern was interpreted as a case of oppositional identity in which Lumbee Indians disassociate themselves from African American vowel norms in subtle but socially meaningful ways.


2001 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 123-140
Author(s):  
Cynthia Willis-Esqueda ◽  
Rosemary J. Esseks

The saliency of category information in person perception for ingroup and outgroup members was investigated. European American participants were presented with a fictional character that varied in race (African American or European American) and occupational garb (military, judge, doctor, or athlete). Occupations were chosen to be either stereotypical or nonstereotypical for African Americans and European Americans with the aid of the Statistical Abstract of the United States (1992) percentages. Based on prior research findings (Park & Rothbart, 1982; Mackie & Worth, 1989), it was predicted European American participants would spontaneously describe an outgroup character by race (superordinate category information), but would mention occupation (subordinate category information) when spontaneously describing the ingroup character. As predicted, results indicated race was rarely mentioned when describing the ingroup character, but was usually the first label applied for the outgroup character. Moreover, when describing the ingroup character, as compared to the outgroup character, occupation was mentioned earlier. Thus, differential utilization of organizing information about a seemingly mundane stimulus may provide a clue as to the origins of intergroup categorizations and bias.


Circulation ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 143 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Nguyen ◽  
Carin A Northuis ◽  
Weihua Guan ◽  
Jan Bressler ◽  
Megan Grove ◽  
...  

Background: DNA methylation (DNAm)-based measures of aging, termed epigenetic clocks (EC), are associated with aging-related outcomes including cardiovascular disease (CVD) and all-cause mortality. Associations of ECs with heart failure (HF) are unclear. We tested whether ECs were positively associated with risk of incident HF in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study and evaluated whether adding ECs to Pooled Cohort Equation (PCE) variables improved risk prediction. Methods: We measured DNAm in peripheral blood leukocytes in 2,263 African American (mean age=56.3 years) and 925 European American (mean age=59.5 years) participants using the Illumina HM450K and calculated 7 ECs: Horvath, Hannum, extrinsic (EEAA) and intrinsic (IEAA) epigenetic age acceleration, Hannum, PhenoAge, and GrimAge. HF was ascertained by ICD- 9 code 428 and adjudication by an expert panel. We carried out race stratified proportional hazards regression to test associations ECs with incident HF, adjusting for PCE variables: age, sex, smoking, total cholesterol, HDL, systolic blood pressure (SBP), antihypertensive medication use, and diabetes. We calculated area under the curve (AUC) and integrated discrimination index (IDI) to evaluate improvement in risk prediction when adding the ECs to PCE variables. Results: The number of incident HF events and mean follow-up time in African Americans and European Americans were 640 (189 in the first 10 years) and 19.3 years, and 191 and 21.7 years, respectively. All 7 ECs were positively associated with HF in both African Americans and European Americans. In African Americans with follow-up restricted to the first 10 years, the HR for a one SD increment in GrimAge (5.64 years) was 1.57 (95% CI=1.31, 1.88), comparable to that for a one-SD (5.82 years) increment in age (HR=1.58, 95% CI=1.36, 1.83) and greater than that for a one-SD (20.2mmHg) increment in SBP (HR=1.33, 95% CI=1.18, 1.51). In European Americans across the entire follow-up period, the HR for a one-SD increment in GrimAge (6.13 years) was 1.22 (95% CI=1.06, 1.41), smaller than that for a one-SD (5.50 years) increment in age (HR=1.93, 95% CI=1.63, 2.29) and larger than that for a one-SD (17.9 mmHG) increment in SBP (HR=1.13, 95% CI=0.98, 1.30). In African Americans with follow-up restricted to the first 10 years, adding GrimAge to PCE variables increased AUC by 0.019 (95% CI=0.003, 0.035) and the IDI was 0.010 (95% CI=0.002, 0.019). In European Americans, adding GrimAge did not change AUC appreciably (0.004, 95% CI=-0.006, 0.014) and the IDI was 0.002 (95% CI=0.000, 0.005). Conclusion: ECs are positively associated with HF in African American and European American participants independent of traditional CVD risk factors. GrimAge modestly improved heart failure risk prediction in African Americans. HF-specific DNAm-based measures should be developed and evaluated for improvement in risk prediction.


Author(s):  
Elizabet Haro ◽  
Yu-Hsiu Hung ◽  
Hyun Seung Yoo ◽  
Robin Littlejohn

The objective of this study is to examine the relationship between implicit biases and blame allocation of accidents across organizational components (workers, supervisors, and organization). The ‘European American-African American’ and created ‘Latino-African American’ Implicit Association Tests (IAT) were used to measure the participants' implicit biases. The Accident Blame Allocation instrument was used to measure the participants' blame allocations, which included accident scenarios with pictures of male and female faces of European Americans, African Americans and Latinos. A total of 102 students, aged from 18 to 23, participated in the study. Results of the two IATs showed that the participants did not have obvious preference tendencies toward any ethnicity, and the ‘European American-African American’ and ‘Latino-African American’ IATs have a positive correlation with score of 0.48 ( p < 0.0001). Results of this study showed that implicit bias did not significantly correlate with accident blame allocation but that the participants' attitudes toward different ethnic groups affected their accident blame allocation patterns.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document