Do Implicit and Explicit Racial Biases Influence Autism Identification and Stigma? An Implicit Association Test Study
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Abstract
Are implicit and explicit biases related to ASD identification and/or stigma? College students (N = 493) completed two IATs assessing implicit stigma and racial biases. They evaluated vignettes depicting a child with ASD or conduct disorder (CD) paired with a photo of a Black or White child. CD was more implicitly and explicitly stigmatized than ASD. Accurately identifying ASD was associated with reduced explicit stigma; identifying CD led to more stigma. Participants who identified as White implicitly associated the White child with ASD and the Black child with CD. A trend in the reverse direction was observed among Black participants. Implicit and explicit biases were unrelated. Findings highlight a need for trainings to ameliorate biases favoring one’s in-group. © 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
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Autism spectrum disorder, Conduct disorder, Explicit, Iat, Implicit, Stigma, Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Photic stimulation, Prejudice, Racism, Random allocation, Social stigma, Young adult, Adult, African american, Anxiety disorder, Article, Attention deficit disorder, Attitude to illness, Autism, Black person, Caucasian, College student, Data analysis software, Depression, European american, Follow up, Health disparity, Human, Major clinical study, Priority journal, Sex factor, Social desirability, Social desirability bias, Vignette, Photostimulation, Procedures, Psychology, Randomization