Much progress has been made in measuring black hole (BH) masses in
(non-active) galactic nuclei using the tight correlation between stellar
velocity dispersions (sigma) in galaxies and the mass of their central BH. The
use of this correlation in quasars, however, is hampered by the difficulty in
measuring sigma in host galaxies that tend to be overpowered by their bright
nuclei. We discuss results from a project that focuses on z~0.3 quasars
suffering from heavy extinction at shorter wavelengths. This makes it possible
to obtain clean spectra of the hosts in the spectral regions of interest, while
broad lines (like H-alpha) are still visible at longer wavelengths. We compare
BH masses obtained from velocity dispersions to those obtained from the broad
line region and thus probe the evolution of this relation and BH growth with
redshift and luminosity. Our preliminary results show an offset between the
position of our objects and the local relation, in the sense that red quasars
have, on average, lower velocity dispersions than local galaxies. We discuss
possible biases and systematic errors that may affect our results.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in the proceedings of the 2nd Kolkata conference
on Observational Evidence for Black Holes in the Universe, ed. S. Chakrabarti
(AIP