APS

APS Virtual Poster Showcase

The Social Neuroscience of Stigma: Implications for Person Perception, Social Interactions, and Well-Being

Friday, May 22, 2020 · Virtual

Oral · Social

Many people feel devalued because of stigmas associated with their personal attributes or group identities. The current symposium examines stigma from a social neuroscience perspective. Talks focus on mental health stigma, interactions between police and racial minorities, ethnic stigmatization and incentive processing, and stereotype threat experienced by women.

Chairs & Discussants

  • Kyle RatnerChair
    University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Jennifer KubotaCoChair
    University of Delaware

Presentations

  1. Neural Response to Evaluating Depression Predicts Perceivers’ Mental Health Treatment Recommendations Anne Krendl
  2. Mentalizing during Interracial Police Officer-Civilian InteractionsJennifer Kubota, Tzipporah Dang, Grace Handley, Bradley Mattan, Jasmin Cloutier
  3. Exposure to Negative Stereotypes Influences Representations of Monetary Incentives in the Nucleus Accumbens Kyle Ratner, B. Locke Welborn, Youngki Hong
  4. Separable Influences of Brain Network Properties, Socialization Processes, and Psychological Factors on Stereotype Threat-Based Performance Decrements: A Large Scale, Intralab Meta-AnalysisChad Forbes, Rachel Amey, Adam Magerman, Mengting Liu