Researches at McMaster University in Canada raises important questions about stereotypes and profiling and about how the symbolic power and authority associated with police uniforms might affect these tendencies.
"We all know that the police generally do an excellent job, but there has also been a great deal of public discourse about biased policing in North America over recent years," said Sukhvinder Obhi, an associate professor at McMaster University in Canada.
Across a series of experiments, researchers examined how study participants - all of them university students - shifted their attention during specific tasks. In some cases, participants wore police-style attire.
During one experiment, participants were asked to identify a simple shape on a computer screen and were distracted by images of white male faces, black male faces, individuals dressed in business suits and others dressed in hoodies.
Researchers tracked and analysed their reaction times to compare how long they were distracted by the various images.
This is surprising, they said, because previous research, much of it conducted in the US, has showed that many people associate African Americans with crime.
While more work is needed to explore this further, Obhi suggests the apparent lack of racial bias in the current study might highlight a potentially important difference between Canadian and American society.
The differences, however, were revealed when participants were distracted by photos of individuals wearing hoodies.
Reaction times slowed, indicating that the images of hoodies were attention-grabbing.
"We know that clothing conveys meaning and that the hoodie has to some extent become a symbol of lower social standing and inner-city youth," said Obhi.
"There is a stereotype out there that links hoodies with crime and violence and this stereotype might be activated to a greater degree when donning the police style uniform," he said.
"This may have contributed to the changes in attention that we observed. Given that attention shapes how we experience the world, attentional biases toward certain groups of people can be problematic," he added.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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