1,040 research outputs found
Food Choice as a Signal of Racial Identity
Objectives: This study experimentally assessed food preference as one potentially important racial identity cue particularly for Black Americans, which in turn impacts interpersonal relations both between ethnicities/races (i.e., inter-group) and within ethnicity/race (i.e., intra-group). We hypothesized that preference for âSoul Food,â which is historically significant to Black Americans, as opposed to âFresh Salad,â would be associated with stronger racial identity and induce more positive reactions among Black participants but more negative reactions among White participants.
Methods: Undergraduate students (N = 365) viewed one of four online profiles that were ostensibly completed by a Black Student. Student gender (i.e., DeShawn vs. LaKeisha) and student food preference (Soul food vs. fresh salad) were manipulated experimentally within the online profiles.
Results: Consistent with the prediction, preference for âSoul Foodâ was associated with stronger perceived racial identity, regardless of participant race. Additionally, Black participants responded more positively when âSoul Foodâ was preferred. In contrast, there was no evidence that White participants reacted differently to the Black students based on food preference.
Conclusions: Food preference serves as one indicator of racial identity among Black Americans. Further implications are discussed.https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/gradposters/1066/thumbnail.jp
Examining the Role of Racial Identity Priming on African American Youthsâ Emotional Responses to Racism: Exposure in the Laboratory Setting
Extending the literature investigating the vulnerability and protective factors related to racial discrimination among African Americans, two studies tested the hypotheses that: (1) using iconic images to prime racial ideologies would result in endorsement of congruent racial identity beliefs; and (2) priming racial identity with icons reflective of various racial ideological beliefs would differentially influence emotional responses to blatant and subtle vicarious racism experiences. In Study 1, participants were randomly assigned to a priming condition (assimilationist, humanist, nationalist), and initial support was established for the feasibility of using iconic images to prime racial ideology. In Study 2, an independent sample was randomly assigned to priming and discrimination (subtle, blatant, control) conditions. Significant findings emerged for both depressed mood and total mood disturbance, for both the humanist and neutral priming conditions. Implications for the use of iconic priming as an innovative approach to examining racial identity in context are discussed.Master of Art
Cohort profile: The national longitudinal study of adolescent to adult health (Add Health)
Why was the cohort set up? The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) was developed in the 1990s in response to a mandate from the United States Congress to fund a study of adolescent health, and was designed by a team of multidisciplinary investigators from the social, behavioural and biomedical sciences. The original purpose of Add Health was to understand the causes of adolescent health and health behaviour, with special emphasis on the multiple contexts of adolescent life. To achieve this scientific goal, Add Health sampled the school and family environments in which young people live their lives, which included data on peer relationship dyads, parents, siblings, neighbourhoods and communities, and provides independent and direct measurement of these complex environments over time. As the cohort transitioned into adulthood, research objectives turned to understanding how adolescent experiences, behaviours and contexts are linked to health and achievement outcomes in adulthood, and the name of the study was officially changed to The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health in 2014
Half-metallicity and Slater-Pauling behavior in the ferromagnetic Heusler alloys
Introductory chapter for the book "Halfmetallic Alloys - Fundamentals and
Applications" to be published in the series Springer Lecture Notes on Physics,
P. H. Dederichs and I. Galanakis (eds). It contains a review of the theoretical
work on the half-metallic Heusler alloys.Comment: Introductory chapter for the book "Halfmetallic Alloys - Fundamentals
and Applications" to be published in the series Springer Lecture Notes on
Physics, P. H. Dederichs and I. Galanakis (eds
Quantum inference of states and processes
The maximum-likelihood principle unifies inference of quantum states and
processes from experimental noisy data. Particularly, a generic quantum process
may be estimated simultaneously with unknown quantum probe states provided that
measurements on probe and transformed probe states are available. Drawbacks of
various approximate treatments are considered.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Operator Analysis of L=1 Baryon Masses in Large N_c QCD
We consider in detail the mass operator analysis for the nonstrange L=1
excited baryons in large N_c QCD. We present a straightforward procedure for
constructing the large N_c baryon wavefunctions, and provide complete analytic
expressions for the matrix elements of all the independent isosinglet mass
operators. We discuss the relationship between the old-fashioned operator
analyses based on nonrelativistic SU(6) symmetry and the modern large N_c
approach, which has a firmer theoretical foundation. We then suggest a possible
dynamical interpretation for the subset of operators preferred strongly by the
data.Comment: 36 pages LaTe
Walking Behavior in Technicolored GUTs
There exist two ways to obtain walk behavior: assuming a large number of
technifermions in the fundamental representation of the technicolor (TC) gauge
group, or a small number of technifermions, assuming that these fermions are in
higher-dimensional representations of the TC group. We propose a scheme to
obtain the walking behavior based on technicolored GUTs (TGUTs), where
elementary scalars with the TC degree of freedom may remain in the theory after
the GUT symmetry breaking.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Watson Brake, A Middle Archaic Mound Complex in Northeast Louisiana
Middle Archaic earthen mound complexes in the lower Mississippi valley are remote antecedents of the famous but much younger Poverty Point earthworks. Watson Brake is the largest and most complex of these early mound sites. Wry extensive coring and stratigraphic studies, aided by 25 radiocarbon dates and six huninescence dates, show that minor earthworks were begun here at ca. 3500 B.C. in association with an oval arrangement of burned rock middens at the edge of a stream terrace. The full extent of the first earthworks is not yet known. Substantial moundraising began ca. 3350 B.C. and continued in stages until some time after 3000 B.C. when the site was abandoned. All 11 mounds and their connecting ridges were occupied between building bursts. Soils,formed on some of these temporary surfaces, while lithics. fire-cracked rock. and,fired clay/loam objects became scattered throughout the mound fills. Faunal and floral remains from a basal midden indicate all-season occupation, supported by broad-spectrum foraging centered on nuts, fish, and deer All the overlying fills are so acidic that organics have not survived. The area enclosed by the mounds was kept clean of debris, suggesting its use as ritual space. The reasons why such elaborate activities first occurred here remain elusive. However some building bursts covary with very well-documented increases in El Nino/Southern Oscillation events. During such rapid increases in ENSO frequencies, rainfall becomes extremely erratic and unpredictable. It may be that early moundraising was a communal response to new stresses of droughts and flooding that created a suddenly more unpredictable food base
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Eye-tracking reveals absent repetition learning across the autism spectrum: Evidence from a passive viewing task
In the domain of memory, autism is characterised by difficulties in explicitly remembering the specific order of stimuli (e.g., Bowler et al., 2016; Poirier, et al., 2011), whereas implicit serial order memory appears to be preserved (Foti et al., 2015). This pattern is of considerable interest because serial order memory is known to play a critical role in childrenâs language development (Ullman, 2004). Currently, however, few paradigms exist that can effectively probe serial order memory across heterogeneous groups of children, including those who are minimally verbal. We present two experiments, involving 39 adults (20 ASD; 19 TD) and 130 children (86 ASD; 44TD), that address this issue using an eye-tracking paradigm, which simply required participants to âwatch out for a bunnyâ that appeared in repeating sequences of screen locations. The adults in experiment 1 all had normative IQs, whereas experiment 2 included children with and without substantial language and intellectual difficulties. In both experiments gaze latencies and anticipatory fixations to the bunny indicated reliable repetition learning effects in the TD but not the ASD groups. Importantly, we were able to acquire reliable data from around half of the children with significant language impairments in experiment 2, indicating that the paradigm can shed light on important learning processes in this underrepresented group. We discuss the implications of these findings for theories of memory in ASD as well as for the utility of eye-tracking technology to probe repetition learning effects in autism
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