Media Releases

Infants show racial bias toward members of own race and against those of other races

April 11, 2017

Toron­to, ON – Two stud­ies by researchers at the Ontario Insti­tute for Stud­ies in Edu­ca­tion (OISE) at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Toron­to and their col­lab­o­ra­tors from the US, UK, France and Chi­na, show that six- to nine-month-old infants demon­strate racial bias in favour of mem­bers of their own race and racial bias against those of oth­er races.

In the first study, “Old­er but not younger infants asso­ciate own-race faces with hap­py music and oth­er-race faces with sad music”, pub­lished in Devel­op­men­tal Sci­ence, results showed that after six months of age, infants begin to asso­ciate own-race faces with hap­py music and oth­er-race faces with sad music.

In the sec­ond study, “Infants rely more on gaze cues from own-race than oth­er-race adults for learn­ing under uncer­tain­ty”, pub­lished in Child Devel­op­ment, researchers found that six-to eight-month-old infants were more inclined to learn infor­ma­tion from an adult of his or her own race than from an adult of a dif­fer­ent race.

(In both stud­ies, infants less than six months of age were not found to show such bias­es).

Racial bias begins at younger age, with­out expe­ri­ence with oth­er-race indi­vid­u­als 

“The find­ings of these stud­ies are sig­nif­i­cant for many rea­sons,” said Dr. Kang Lee, pro­fes­sor at OISE’s Jack­man Insti­tute of Child Study, a Tier 1 Cana­da Research Chair and lead author of the stud­ies. “The results show that race-based bias already exists around the sec­ond half of a child’s first year.  This chal­lenges the pop­u­lar view that race-based bias first emerges only dur­ing the preschool years.” Hear Dr. Lee dis­cuss the research results.

Researchers say these find­ings are also impor­tant because they offer a new per­spec­tive on the cause of race-based bias.

“When we con­sid­er why some­one has a racial bias, we often think of neg­a­tive expe­ri­ence he or she may have had with oth­er-race indi­vid­u­als.  But, these find­ings sug­gest that a race-based bias emerges with­out expe­ri­ence with oth­er-race indi­vid­u­als,” said Dr. Naiqi (Gabriel) Xiao, first author of the two papers and post­doc­tor­al fel­low at Prince­ton Uni­ver­si­ty.

This can be inferred because pri­or stud­ies from oth­er labs have indi­cat­ed that many infants typ­i­cal­ly expe­ri­ence over 90 per cent own-race faces. Fol­low­ing this pat­tern, the cur­rent stud­ies involved babies who had lit­tle to no pri­or expe­ri­ence with oth­er-race indi­vid­u­als.

“These find­ings thus point to the pos­si­bil­i­ty that aspects of racial bias lat­er in life may arise from our lack of expo­sure to oth­er-race indi­vid­u­als in infan­cy,” Dr. Lee said.

Study results could be sig­nif­i­cant in pre­ven­tion of racial bias

He con­tin­ued to explain that over­all, the results of these stud­ies are crit­i­cal­ly impor­tant giv­en the issues of wide-spread racial bias and racism around the world.

“If we can pin­point the start­ing point of racial bias, which we may have done here, we can start to find ways to pre­vent racial bias­es from hap­pen­ing,” he said.

“An impor­tant find­ing is that infants will learn from peo­ple they are most exposed to,” added Dr. Xiao, indi­cat­ing that par­ents can help pre­vent racial bias by, for exam­ple, intro­duc­ing their chil­dren to peo­ple from a vari­ety of races.

First study: Face-race and music

In the first study, infants from 3 to 10 months of age watched a sequence of videos depict­ing female adults with a neu­tral facial expres­sion. Before view­ing each face, infants heard a music clip. Babies par­tic­i­pat­ed in one of the four music-face com­bi­na­tions: hap­py music fol­lowed by own-race faces, sad music fol­lowed by own-race faces, hap­py music fol­lowed by oth­er-race faces, and sad music fol­lowed by oth­er-race faces. The study found that infants at six to nine months of age looked longer at own-race faces when paired with hap­py music as opposed to with sad music. By con­trast, six- to nine-month-olds looked longer at oth­er-race faces when paired with sad music com­pared to with hap­py music.

Sec­ond study: Face-race and learn­ing

The sec­ond study exam­ined whether infants were biased to learn from own-race adults ver­sus oth­er-race adults. Six to eight-month-old infants saw a series of videos. In each video, a female adult looked at any one of the four cor­ners of the screen. Fol­low­ing the look, in some videos, an ani­mal image appeared in the looked-at loca­tion (a reli­able gaze). In oth­er videos, an ani­mal image appeared at a non-looked-at loca­tion (an unre­li­able gaze). The results showed that six to eight-month-old infants fol­lowed the gaze of mem­bers of their own race more than they fol­lowed the gaze of oth­er-race indi­vid­u­als. This occurred when the faces were slight­ly unre­li­able, as they are in the nat­ur­al envi­ron­ment. This result sug­gests that, under uncer­tain­ty, infants are biased to learn infor­ma­tion from own-race adults as opposed to oth­er-race adults.

Racial bias can ‘per­me­ate almost all of our social inter­ac­tions’

Dr. Lee said it’s impor­tant to be mind­ful of the impact that racial bias has on our every­day lives, stress­ing that not only is explic­it bias a con­cern, but so too are implic­it forms.

“Implic­it racial bias­es tend to be sub­con­scious, per­ni­cious, and insid­i­ous. It per­me­ates almost all of our social inter­ac­tions, from health care to com­merce, employ­ment, pol­i­tics, and dat­ing. Because of that, it’s very impor­tant to study where these kinds of bias­es come from and use that infor­ma­tion to try and pre­vent racial bias­es from devel­op­ing,” he said.

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Dr. Kang Lee
Pro­fes­sor, Dr. Eric Jack­man Insti­tute for Child Study, OISE/University of Toron­to
Email: kang.lee@utoronto.ca   (Email best way to reach Dr. Lee to set up inter­view)

Naiqi (Gabriel) Xiao
Post­doc­tor­al Researcher, Prince­ton Uni­ver­si­ty
Email: naiqi.xiao@princeton.edu
Phone: +1–609-608‑6248

Media Rela­tions Coor­di­na­tor
Lind­sey Craig
Com­mu­ni­ca­tions & Media Rela­tions Coor­di­na­tor, OISE/University of Toron­to
Email: lindsey.craig@utoronto.ca
Phone: 416–978-1127