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Changes for page Research at a Glance

Last modified by Ryan C on 2025/06/26 03:09

From version 102.1
edited by Ryan C
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To version 109.1
edited by Ryan C
on 2025/06/19 02:53
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Summary

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1 -Main.Studies.WebHome
1 +Main Categories.Science & Research.WebHome
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1 +{{toc/}}
2 +
3 +
1 1  = Research at a Glance =
2 2  
3 3  
4 4  
5 - Welcome to the **Research at a Glance** repository. This section serves as a **centralized reference hub** for key academic studies related to various important Racial themes. Each study is categorized for easy navigation and presented in a **collapsible format** to maintain a clean layout. I wanted to make this for a couple of reasons. Number one is organization. There are a ton of useful studies out there that expose the truth, sometimes inadvertently. You'll notice that in this initial draft the summaries are often woke and reflect the bias of the AI writing them as well as the researchers politically correct conclusion in most cases. That's because I haven't gotten to going through and pointing out the reasons I put all of them in here.
8 + Welcome to the **Research at a Glance** repository. This section serves as a **centralized reference hub** for key academic studies related to various important Racial themes. Each study is categorized for easy navigation and presented in a **collapsible format** to maintain a clean layout. I wanted to make this for a couple of reasons. Number one is organization. There are a ton of useful studies out there that expose the truth, sometimes inadvertently. You'll notice that in this initial draft the summaries are often woke and reflect the bias of the AI writing them as well as the researchers politically correct conclusion in most cases. That's because I haven't gotten to going through and pointing out the reasons I put all of them in here.
6 6  
7 7  
8 8   There is often an underlying hypocrisy or double standard, saying the quiet part out loud, or conclusions that are so much of an antithesis to what the data shows that made me want to include it. At least, thats the idea for once its polished. I have about 150 more studies to upload, so it will be a few weeks before I get through it all. Until such time, feel free to search for them yourself and edit in what you find, or add your own studies. If you like you can do it manually, or if you'd rather go the route I did, just rename the study to its doi number and feed the study into an AI and tell them to summarize the study using the following format:
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16 16  - You'll also find a download link to the original full study in pdf form at the bottom of the collapsible block.
17 17  
18 18  
19 -{{toc/}}
20 20  
21 -
22 -
23 -
24 -
25 25  = Genetics =
26 26  
25 +{{expandable summary="
27 27  
28 -{{expandable summary="Study: Reconstructing Indian Population History"}}
27 +Study: Reconstructing Indian Population History"}}
29 29  **Source:** *Nature*
30 30  **Date of Publication:** *2009*
31 31  **Author(s):** *David Reich, Kumarasamy Thangaraj, Nick Patterson, Alkes L. Price, Lalji Singh*
... ... @@ -159,9 +159,8 @@
159 159  {{/expandable}}
160 160  {{/expandable}}
161 161  
162 -{{expandable summary="
161 +{{expandable summary="
163 163  
164 -
165 165  Study: Meta-analysis of the heritability of human traits based on fifty years of twin studies"}}
166 166  **Source:** *Nature Genetics*
167 167  **Date of Publication:** *2015*
... ... @@ -229,9 +229,8 @@
229 229  {{/expandable}}
230 230  {{/expandable}}
231 231  
232 -{{expandable summary="
230 +{{expandable summary="
233 233  
234 -
235 235  Study: Genetic Analysis of African Populations: Human Evolution and Complex Disease"}}
236 236  **Source:** *Nature Reviews Genetics*
237 237  **Date of Publication:** *2002*
... ... @@ -299,9 +299,8 @@
299 299  {{/expandable}}
300 300  {{/expandable}}
301 301  
302 -{{expandable summary="
299 +{{expandable summary="
303 303  
304 -
305 305  Study: Pervasive Findings of Directional Selection in Ancient DNA"}}
306 306  **Source:** *bioRxiv Preprint*
307 307  **Date of Publication:** *September 15, 2024*
... ... @@ -712,6 +712,7 @@
712 712  {{/expandable}}
713 713  
714 714  {{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
711 +
715 715  {{/expandable}}
716 716  {{/expandable}}
717 717  
... ... @@ -1054,8 +1054,9 @@
1054 1054  {{/expandable}}
1055 1055  {{/expandable}}
1056 1056  
1054 +{{expandable summary="
1057 1057  
1058 -{{expandable summary="Study: Is there a Dysgenic Secular Trend Towards Slowing Simple Reaction Time?"}}
1056 +Study: Is there a Dysgenic Secular Trend Towards Slowing Simple Reaction Time?"}}
1059 1059  **Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
1060 1060  **Date of Publication:** *2014*
1061 1061  **Author(s):** *Michael A. Woodley, Jan te Nijenhuis, Raegan Murphy*
... ... @@ -1120,6 +1120,7 @@
1120 1120  {{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1121 1121  [[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1016_j.intell.2014.05.012.pdf]]
1122 1122  {{/expandable}}
1121 +{{/expandable}}
1123 1123  
1124 1124  = Whiteness & White Guilt =
1125 1125  
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1258 1258  {{/expandable}}
1259 1259  
1260 1260  {{expandable summary="Study: Rising Morbidity and Mortality in Midlife Among White Non-Hispanic Americans"}}
1261 -**Source:** *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)*
1262 -**Date of Publication:** *2015*
1263 -**Author(s):** *Anne Case, Angus Deaton*
1264 -**Title:** *"Rising Morbidity and Mortality in Midlife Among White Non-Hispanic Americans in the 21st Century"*
1265 -**DOI:** [10.1073/pnas.1518393112](https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1518393112)
1266 -**Subject Matter:** *Public Health, Mortality, Socioeconomic Factors* 
1260 +**Source:** *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)*
1261 +**Date of Publication:** *2015*
1262 +**Author(s):** *Anne Case, Angus Deaton*
1263 +**Title:** *"Rising Morbidity and Mortality in Midlife Among White Non-Hispanic Americans in the 21st Century"*
1264 +**DOI:** [10.1073/pnas.1518393112](https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1518393112)
1265 +**Subject Matter:** *Public Health, Mortality, Socioeconomic Factors*
1267 1267  
1268 1268  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1269 1269  1. **General Observations:**
... ... @@ -1389,6 +1389,7 @@
1389 1389  {{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1390 1390  [[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1080_1369183X.2023.2182548.pdf]]
1391 1391  {{/expandable}}
1391 +{{/expandable}}
1392 1392  
1393 1393  = Media =
1394 1394  
... ... @@ -1592,3 +1592,109 @@
1592 1592  [[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1093_joc_jqx021.pdf]]
1593 1593  {{/expandable}}
1594 1594  {{/expandable}}
1595 +
1596 +{{expandable summary="Study: White Americans’ Preference for Black People in Advertising Has Increased in the Past 66 Years"}}
1597 +Source: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
1598 +Date of Publication: February 20, 2024
1599 +Author(s): Julia Diana Lenk, Jochen Hartmann, Henrik Sattler
1600 +Title: "White Americans’ Preference for Black People in Advertising Has Increased in the Past 66 Years: A Meta-Analysis"
1601 +DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2307505121
1602 +Subject Matter: Advertising, Race, Consumer Behavior, Meta-Analysis
1603 +
1604 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1605 +
1606 +Study Scale:
1607 +
1608 +62 studies, 332 effect sizes, 10,186 participants (Black and White Americans).
1609 +
1610 +Covers the period 1956–2022.
1611 +
1612 +Cohen’s d Effect Sizes (Model-Free):
1613 +
1614 +Black viewers: d = 0.50 → strong, consistent ingroup preference for Black models.
1615 +
1616 +White viewers: d = –0.08 overall; pre-2000: d = –0.16 (ingroup); post-2000: d = +0.02 (outgroup leaning).
1617 +
1618 +Regression Findings:
1619 +
1620 +White viewers’ preference for Black models increases by ~0.0128 d/year since 1956 (p < 0.05).
1621 +
1622 +By 2022, White viewers showed positive directional preference for Black endorsers.
1623 +
1624 +Black viewer preferences remained stable across the 66 years.
1625 +{{/expandable}}
1626 +
1627 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1628 +
1629 +Primary Observations:
1630 +
1631 +Ingroup favoritism is evident: Black viewers consistently prefer Black endorsers.
1632 +
1633 +White viewers’ preferences have shifted significantly over time toward favoring Black endorsers.
1634 +
1635 +Temporal Trends:
1636 +
1637 +Turning point: Around 2002–2003, White viewers began showing a positive (though small) preference for Black endorsers.
1638 +
1639 +Moderator Effects:
1640 +
1641 +Low anti-Black prejudice and low White ethnic identification correlate with greater White preference for Black endorsers.
1642 +
1643 +Economic hardship (e.g., high unemployment) slightly reduces White preference for Black endorsers.
1644 +
1645 +Identification Model:
1646 +
1647 +Preference changes are stronger when outcomes measure identification with endorsers (e.g., similarity, attractiveness).
1648 +{{/expandable}}
1649 +
1650 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1651 +
1652 +Strengths of the Study:
1653 +
1654 +Longest-running meta-analysis on interracial preferences in advertising.
1655 +
1656 +Includes multilevel modeling and 21 meta-analytic covariates.
1657 +
1658 +Accounts for both perceiver and societal context, and controls for publication bias.
1659 +
1660 +Limitations:
1661 +
1662 +Only examines Black and White racial dynamics—doesn’t cover Hispanic, Asian, or multiracial groups.
1663 +
1664 +72% of effect sizes are from student samples (not fully generalizable).
1665 +
1666 +Social desirability bias may affect lab-based responses.
1667 +
1668 +Suggestions for Improvement:
1669 +
1670 +Include field experiments and more representative samples (age, class, ideology).
1671 +
1672 +Examine how Black models are portrayed, not just if they are shown.
1673 +
1674 +Extend research to other racial groups and multiracial representations.
1675 +{{/expandable}}
1676 +
1677 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1678 +
1679 +Provides empirical support for the dynamic shift in White American attitudes over time.
1680 +
1681 +Directly informs discussions about media representation, consumer behavior, and racial identity.
1682 +
1683 +Supports policy and commercial arguments for including more diverse models in advertising.
1684 +{{/expandable}}
1685 +
1686 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1687 +
1688 +Expand analysis to Latino, Asian, and multiracial models in media.
1689 +
1690 +Study real-world (non-lab) consumer reactions to racial diversity in advertising.
1691 +
1692 +Investigate how economic anxiety influences racial preferences in other domains (e.g., hiring, education).
1693 +
1694 +Explore how virtual influencers or AI-generated models affect racial perceptions.
1695 +{{/expandable}}
1696 +
1697 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1698 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:lenk-et-al-white-americans-preference-for-black-people-in-advertising-has-increased-in-the-past-66-years-a-meta-analysis.pdf]]
1699 +{{/expandable}}
1700 +{{/expandable}}