Irene V. Blair

     
Institution
University of Colorado

Current Position
Associate Professor

Highest Degree
Ph.D. in Social Psychology from Yale University, 1995

Research Interests
Prejudice/Stereotyping
Social Cognition

Laboratory Home Page
CU Stereotyping and Prejudice Laboratory

Courses Taught
Advanced Topics in Social Psychology: Stereotypes and Prejudice
Implicit Social Cognition
Philosophical and Theoretical Issues in Social Psychology
Social Psychology
Social Psychology for Honors Students
Stereotypes and Prejudice

 
Irene V. Blair
Department of Psychology
University of Colorado
Campus Box 345
Boulder, Colorado 80309-0345
U.S.A.

Home Page
Phone: (303) 492-4563
Fax: (303) 492-2967
Vita

Irene V. Blair
My research seeks to understand stereotyping and prejudice, with a primary focus on the cognitive processes that contribute to the earliest stages of stereotyping. My collaborators and I have shown that those processes are not as simple as scientists once thought. For example, even though stereotypes can be automatically activated and influence a variety of outcomes, we have provided multiple demonstrations that such activation is not impervious to the perceiver's conscious expectations and strategies. Indeed there is growing evidence that automatic group attitudes, in general, are malleable and sensitive to variations in the perceiver's context.

Most recently, we have begun a new line of work to investigate the manner in which a target's physical features are used to make stereotypic judgments. In accordance with traditional models of stereotyping, we have shown that African Americans who can be more easily categorized as group members on the basis of their physical features, are more likely to be judged as having stereotypic traits. We have also shown, however, that those same features may directly activate the stereotype and lead to more stereotypic judgments, over and above those resulting from categorization. Based on this and other evidence, we have begun to develop a model of the manner in which physical features may become directly associated with stereotypic traits, leading to the generalization of stereotypes from category-based to feature-based associations.


Journal Articles:

  • Blair, I. V. (2002). The malleability of automatic stereotypes and prejudice. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 6, 242-261.
  • Blair, I. V., & Banaji, M. R. (1996). Automatic and controlled processes in stereotype priming. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 70, 1142-1163.
  • Blair, I. V., Chapleau, K. M., & Judd, C. M. (2004). The use of Afrocentric features as cues for judgment in the presence of diagnostic information. European Journal of Social Psychology, 34, 1-10.
  • Blair, I. V., & Jost, J. T. (2003). Exit, loyalty, and collective action among workers in a simulated business environment: Interactive effects of group identification and boundary permeability. Social Justice Research, 16, 95-108.
  • Blair, I. V., Judd, C. M., & Chapleau, K. M. (2004). The influence of Afrocentric facial features in criminal sentencing. Psychological Science, 15, 674-679.
  • Blair, I. V., Judd, C. M., & Fallman, J. L. (2004). The automaticity of race and Afrocentric facial features in social judgments. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 87, 763-778.
  • Blair, I. V., Ma, J. E., & Lenton, A. P. (2001). Imagining stereotypes away: The moderation of implicit stereotypes through mental imagery. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 81, 828-841.
  • Judd, C. M., Blair, I. V., & Chapleau, K. M. (2004). Automatic stereotypes versus automatic prejudice: Sorting out the possibilities in the Payne (2002) weapon paradigm. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 40, 75-81.
  • Lenton, A. P., Blair, I. V., & Hastie, R. (2001). Illusions of gender: Stereotypes evoke false memories. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 37, 3-14.

Other Publications:

  • Devine, P. G., Plant, E.A., & Blair, I. V. (2001). Classic and contemporary analyses of racial prejudice (pp. 198-217). In R. Brown and S. Gaertner (Eds.), Handbook of social psychology: Intergroup processes. Oxford, UK: Blackwell.

 Page last edited by profile holder: June 21, 2002
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