Intersectional Bias in First Impressions of Competence

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The present research examines how intersecting social categories shape first impressions of competence, with a focus on perceptions of Black women. Across five studies (total N = 582), we tested whether competence judgments toward Black women reflect additive effects of race and gender stereotypes or arise from a distinct intersectional stereotype. In Studies 1–3, using mixed-category designs, participants consistently rated Black men and White women more positively than White men, but Black women did not receive these advantages, producing a robust intersectional attenuation. Studies 4–5 manipulated comparison context to test whether this attenuation was context-dependent. When cross-category comparisons were minimized (Study 4: single-axis gender; Study 5: between-subjects design), Black women’s evaluations partially improved but did not show a detectable pro-Black advantage. These findings are inconsistent with additive models of stereotyping but align with predictions of intersectional invisibility and, to some extent, the emergence model: Black women’s non-prototypical status reduces the activation of positive single-axis processes, and partial corrective processes can mitigate, but not fully eliminate this. Together, these studies demonstrate that intersectional disadvantage is context-dependent, emerging when multiple categories are simultaneously salient, and highlight the importance of considering both intersectional category membership and task structure in shaping first impressions.

Article activity feed