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angry targets in a categorical manner, because of their consistency with the socially shared stereotype,” the authors conclude. In other words, anger led both white and black perceivers to focus more ...
Prospective teachers more likely to view black faces than white faces as angry. ScienceDaily . Retrieved May 25, 2025 from www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2018 / 07 / 180702111106.htm ...
found that the teachers were 36% more likely to mistakenly believe that a Black child is making an angry face, than a white child. Because of this, these teachers believe that the Black child is ...
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