Social-cognitive biases underlying the development of ableism.

2区 医学 Q1 Medicine Advances in Child Development and Behavior Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-22 DOI:10.1016/bs.acdb.2024.07.002
Vikram K Jaswal, Zoe S Robertson
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Abstract

Disabled people are the largest minority group in the world. Like members of many minority groups, they face considerable prejudice and discrimination-known as ableism. Ableism reflects entrenched beliefs about what human bodies and minds should be like and a devaluation of individuals who deviate from that ideal. There is surprisingly little psychological science about ableism, and even less about its development. This chapter considers how social-cognitive biases evident in early childhood could contribute to its development. The chapter is structured around four biases: Prescriptive reasoning, promiscuous teleology, psychological essentialism, and the positivity bias. For each bias, we review foundational research about how it manifests in early childhood, speculate about its connection to ableism, and outline avenues for additional research. Understanding how social-cognitive biases contribute to the development of ableism is an important first step in efforts to equip children (and adults) with the tools to reject it.

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残疾歧视发展背后的社会认知偏差。
残疾人是世界上最大的少数群体。与许多少数群体成员一样,他们也面临着相当大的偏见和歧视--即所谓的 "能力主义"。能力歧视反映了人们对于人类身体和心理应该是什么样子的根深蒂固的观念,以及对偏离这一理想的个人的贬低。令人惊讶的是,关于能力歧视的心理学研究很少,关于其发展的研究就更少了。本章探讨了幼儿期明显的社会认知偏见是如何导致其发展的。本章围绕四种偏见展开:规定性推理、杂乱目的论、心理本质论和积极性偏见。针对每种偏见,我们回顾了有关其在幼儿期表现形式的基础研究,推测了其与能力主义的联系,并概述了进一步研究的途径。了解社会认知偏差如何导致能力缺失症的形成,是努力让儿童(和成人)掌握摒弃能力缺失症的工具的重要第一步。
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来源期刊
Advances in Child Development and Behavior
Advances in Child Development and Behavior PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
30
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