Biased Summary and Analysis

Summary: Introduction and Part I: What Meets the Eye  

Introduction 

Eberhardt begins Biased by recounting a training session she led on police–community relations at the Oakland Police Department. To explain the pervasiveness of racial bias and the “black-crime association” specifically, she shares two stories. The first concerns her then–five-year-old son, who automatically feared and distrusted a Black passenger on an airplane but could not explain why. The second comes from a Black police officer who, while working undercover, ended up mistaking his own reflection for a potentially dangerous individual. These examples, Eberhardt says, show how even Black individuals end up internalizing the stereotype that conflates their race with criminal behavior. 

Chapter 1: Seeing Each Other 

This chapter begins with Eberhardt briefly recalling her childhood move from a predominantly Black neighborhood to a primarily white one. She describes her struggle to put names to faces in this new social environment, a phenomenon known to psychologists as the “other-race effect.” Difficulty in recognizing people of another race is, Eberhardt says, “a function of biology and exposure,” not necessarily a reflection of a bigoted worldview. Phenomena like these, she proceeds to explain, led to her interest in the psychology of racial biases, something she now studies as a professor at Stanford. Eberhardt cites a string of robberies in Oakland’s Chinatown to show how the other-race effect can crop up even when the stakes are high—for instance, when trying to identify a criminal suspect. 

Chapter 2: Nurturing Bias 

Next, Eberhardt looks at some of the factors—biological as well as cultural—that allow bias to arise. She describes the brain’s efficiency at categorization and points out that much of the time, it is useful to be able to make quick decisions about what belongs in what category. This tendency causes trouble, however, when the brain’s shorthand way of grouping things turns into stereotypes and prejudices about groups of people. Eberhardt cites studies in which participants respond differently to pictures based on information about the subject’s race and describes a tool known as the implicit association test (IAT), which allows for the measurement of implicit biases. She also describes the origins of the word stereotype in the work of journalist Walter Lippmann (1889–1974). As the chapter closes, Eberhardt asks the reader to reflect on the prevalence of bias and the possibility of controlling its impact. 

Analysis: Introduction and Part I: What Meets the Eye 

Throughout the early chapters of her book, Eberhardt is emphatic that “implicit bias is not a new way of calling someone a racist.” In fact, one major focus of Biased is the universal and inherent nature of bias. The other-race effect, for instance, has been demonstrated in people of many different racial and ethnic identities: the human brain, it seems, is simply predisposed to make finer distinctions among the people that one spends the most time with. Eberhardt is candid about her own difficulty, as a middle schooler, in telling her white classmates apart, a point that shows that the effect is not a product of prejudice or privilege. Biases, Eberhardt argues throughout, are a cognitive feature of the human mind, not a moral failing in themselves. The moral question is whether we can recognize and counteract our biases to make fairer and more equitable decisions.  

At the same time, Eberhardt is clear that although biases are a fundamental quality of human psychology, biased thinking does not have the same practical effects on all groups. Racial bias, which provides most of the book’s examples, has a more profound negative effect on some groups than others. A key example of this, the “black-crime association,” is briefly described in the introduction and Chapter 1 but is expounded on more fully in Chapters 3 (“A Bad Dude”) and 4 (“Male Black”).

bartleby write.
Proofread first!
Meet your new favorite all-in-one writing tool!
Easily correct or dismiss spelling & grammar errors and learn to format citations correctly. Check your paper before you turn it in.
bartleby write.
Proofread first!
Meet your new favorite all-in-one writing tool!
Easily correct or dismiss spelling & grammar errors and learn to format citations correctly. Check your paper before you turn it in.
bartleby write.
Meet your new favorite all-in-one writing tool!Easily correct or dismiss spelling & grammar errors and learn to format citations correctly. Check your paper before you turn it in.

Browse Popular Homework Q&A

Find answers to questions asked by students like you.
Q: 6. (3 points) Suppose Apple is considering expanding its product line to include the new electric…
Q: A 21 L reaction vessel contains only Ar gas. The system is kept at 55 °C and the pressure inside the…
Q: Jesus and Victoria Gonzales' filing status is married filing jointly. They provide care for…
Q: A 1995 penny having a mass of 2.740 g is cut to expose the zinc and dropped into sulfuric acid.…
Q: Macmillan Learning A reactant decomposes with a half-life of 173 s when its initial concentration is…
Q: Pharoah Company issued $380,000 of 6%, 20-year bonds on January 1, 2025, at face value. Interest is…
Q: 3. You are selling necklaces on Amazon for $23.99 and your gross margin is 53%. Amazon will let you…
Q: 3. Can you make some predictions about the polarity of the molecules? Which ones are polar? Which…
Q: How much combustion air is needed for boilers? A) Approximately 100% more than needed for…
Q: Although Uv/Vis is not generally regarded as an instrument for identifying structures, if you were…
Q: A 55 kg beam is loaded and supported as shown, where F1-9.5 kN, F2= 2.4 kN, F3= 8.4 kN, MC= 1.8 kN…
Q: The city is contemplating making street improvements on a street with only two residents. The…
Q: Cost of Goods Mfg Cutting Prepare a schedule of cost of goods manufactured for the Cutting…
Q: ock has a 50% chance of producing a 40% return, a 30% chance of producing a 15% return, and a 20%…
Q: Which of the following will best limit the liability of ALL owners of the business? O Sole…
Q: Suppose Apple is considering expanding its product line to include the new electric car, iCar. The…
Q: The substantia nigra of the midbrain is rich in the neurotransmitter: A) acetylcholine B) serotonin…
Q: Noise generated by an airport best illustrates.  market power. overproduction of private goods.…
Q: Discuss with supporting evidence from small emerging economy and advanced economy, Central bank…
Q: total pressure of 10 atm, 56 g of nitrogen and 96 g of oxygen are mixed isothermally. The ratio of…
Q: A worker's labor supply depends on, among other things, his ability, his preference for the task,…
Q: 3f) Network Latency Analysis Define a function called analyze_network_latency that, given a list of…