Advertisement

The Four-Minute Race Eraser

Discover how evolution can help combat racism and reshape our understanding of racial categories with insights from an evolutionary psychologist.

Google NewsGoogle News Preferred Source

Newsletter

Sign up for our email newsletter for the latest science news

Sign Up

Robert Kurzban thinks evolution offers hints to combat racism. Kurzban, an evolutionary psychologist at the University of California at Los Angeles, speculates that the primal impulse to spot allies prompted people to use race as a clue about allegiance. If other visual clues were better indicators, he says, people would pay less attention to race. He and his colleagues tested the idea by having volunteers watch videos showing conversations among groups of two African American men and two white men. Next, sentences were displayed alongside photos of the people who said them. At the end of the study, the volunteers were asked to match sentences with the speakers.

Advertisement

Volunteers initially mixed up the speakers mostly along racial lines. But in a second video, the speakers wore colored T-shirts that divided them into two teams. This time, volunteers confused statements between members of the same team more often than between members of the same race, evidently paying less attention now to skin color. It took just four minutes to erase racial categories, Kurzban says.

Stay Curious

JoinOur List

Sign up for our weekly science updates

View our Privacy Policy

SubscribeTo The Magazine

Save up to 40% off the cover price when you subscribe to Discover magazine.

Subscribe
Advertisement

1 Free Article