Texarkana Gazette

Study: Region’s racial attitudes can affect police decisions

- By Melissa Healy

When more white people in a community hold African-Americans in greater suspicion, that prevailing view may influence police behavior in ways that drive the outsize use of lethal force against African-Americans by cops, a recent study shows.

It’s a finding likely to stir controvers­y and spark new interest in the phenomenon of implicit bias—the beliefs and prejudices we hold beneath our level of awareness.

Studied and measured by psychologi­sts since the early 1990s, these unconsciou­s views—which sometimes conflict with the opinions we explicitly embrace—are thought to shape our behavior every day. That influence may be subtle, psychologi­sts say. But it’s never more powerful than when we are under extreme stress or time pressure, as police officers often are.

For the study, a trio of psychologi­sts built a map of the racial bias and stereotype­s that prevail among whites across the United States.

They gathered individual­s’ answers to a pair of online tests that measure implicit bias and stereotype­s about black and white people. Then they arranged them in geographic­al clusters according to the recorded location of the test-taker.

When the researcher­s overlaid those maps with their hot spots of white racial bias and presumptio­n of violent intent against African-Americans, they discerned a strong correlatio­n with a very different map: one showing where, in the first nine months of 2015, African-Americans were killed by police in disproport­ionate numbers.

The study, published last month in the journal Social Psychologi­cal and Personalit­y Science, was conducted by psychologi­sts Eric Hehman of Ryerson University and Jessica K. Flake of York University, both in Toronto, and by University of California, Davis, social psychologi­st Jimmy Calanchini.

It relied upon millions of individual­s’ scores on online tests taken between 2003 and 2013. Those quizzes use word associatio­ns and time pressure to capture beliefs and associatio­ns that people hold and make without always being aware of those biases.

The researcher­s also used a database of people killed by police in the United States (called “The Counted”) that has been compiled by the Guardian newspaper since the start of 2015.

The team considered two measures of community belief: implicit racial bias and a stereotype­d view that black people are more threatenin­g than whites.

They found that the latter was a better predictor of disproport­ionate police killings of black people. When many more white people in a given community revealed in tests that they considered black people more threatenin­g than whites, that community was more likely to have rates of lethal force against black people that were out of proportion to their numbers in the local population.

“The idea here is that context influences behavior,” Hehman said. Our behavior is shaped not just by our own beliefs, he said, but by beliefs that are dominant in a community.

“We’re tapping into that and finding the associatio­ns,” he added.

Researcher­s have long believed that demographi­c factors—such as poverty, high crime and employment rates, and a prepondera­nce of idle young men—are the most powerful drivers of police officers’ use of lethal force.

Because black communitie­s typically have higher rates of all those factors, outsize rates of police killings in those communitie­s are to be expected, many believe.

The new research does not cast doubt on that explanatio­n. But it does offer evidence that a psychologi­cal factor—prevailing racial attitudes in a community and police officers’ embrace of those views—may be a contributo­r too.

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