Abstract

Although decades of research have shown that intergroup contact critically impacts person perception and evaluation, little is known about how contact shapes the ability to infer others' mental states from facial cues (commonly referred to as mentalizing). In a pair of studies, we demonstrated that interracial contact and motivation to attend to faces jointly influence White perceivers’ ability to infer mental states based on facial expressions displaying secondary emotions from both White targets alone (study 1) and White and Black targets (study 2; pre-registered). Consistent with previous work on the effect of motivation and interracial contact on other-race face memory, we found that motivation and interracial contact interacted to shape perceivers' accuracy at inferring mental states from secondary emotions. When motivated to attend to the task, high-contact White perceivers were more accurate at inferring both Black and White targets’ mental states; unexpectedly, the opposite was true for low-contact perceivers. Importantly, the target race did not interact with interracial contact, suggesting that contact is associated with general changes in mentalizing irrespective of target race. These findings expand the theoretical understanding and implications of contact for fundamental social cognition.

Highlights

  • In study 1, we explored how interracial contact influences mentalizing from same-race faces (i.e. White perceivers inferring mental states from only White RME targets)

  • Supporting our predictions, we observed a significant two-way interaction between motivation condition and lifetime interracial contact (B = 0.242, s.e. = 0.106, 95% CI = [0.035, 0.449], z = 2.288, p = 0.022)

  • We ran follow-up analyses to decompose the interaction between motivation condition and lifetime interracial contact

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Summary

Introduction

In study 1, we explored how interracial contact influences mentalizing from same-race faces (i.e. White perceivers inferring mental states from only White RME targets). Because motivation to deeply process faces may enable high-contact perceivers to overcome decreased social cognitive engagement resulting from increased face processing efficiency, we manipulated motivation to attend to targets in a between-subjects manner. We investigated the effect of individual differences in lifetime interracial contact and motivation to attend to target faces on White perceivers’ ability to infer mental states from same-race (White) and cross-race (Black) faces, predicting that motivation would modulate the relationship between contact and mentalizing ability irrespective of target race. Based on the findings from Cloutier et al [3] demonstrating that changes in recruitment of face processing and social cognitive brain networks associated with contact do not vary as a function of target race, we predicted the same pattern of results found in study 1 irrespective of target race (https://osf.io/v8wgg/). We remained agnostic about the effect of motivation on low-contact perceivers’ mentalizing accuracy

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