Sylvia Perry, Professor at Northwestern, to Give Colloquium on Racial Bias Awareness

Sylvia Perry
Photo Submitted

Sylvia Perry

How do white individuals perceive racially biased behaviors, and what happens when they reflect on their racial biases?

Sylvia Perry, a Northwestern University associate professor of psychology, is a leading researcher in racial bias awareness. She will share her research with the U of A community in an upcoming colloquium titled "The Development of Racial Bias Awareness."

This presentation is hosted by the Department of Psychological Science Diversity Committee and will be held at 4 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 19, in Graduate Education Building room 343.   

With the current talk, Perry will share her research on racial bias awareness — a measure of white individuals' awareness and concern about their racial biases toward Black individuals. Specifically, she will discuss, first, how racial bias awareness relates to White individuals' reactions to evidence of personal and other people's racial biases and, second, how bias awareness relates to white individuals' willingness to discuss race and racism with others.

Finally, she will discuss newer work on how bias awareness is associated with how white parents socialize their children about race and racism and how their socialization practices might affect their white children's attitudes toward Black children. 

Perry received her M.A. and Ph.D. in social psychology at the University of Illinois at Chicago and was the SAGE Sara Miller McCune Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University. Perry has earned several awards for her teaching and research, and her work has been funded by national organizations such as the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institute for Minority Health and Health Disparities, and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. 

Perry's current research focuses include:

  • Individual differences in people's awareness of their racially biased tendencies,
  • The situational and individual factors that influence parents' willingness to have race discussions with their children and
  • The impact of medical school racial climate on medical student and patient outcomes. 

For more information, please contact Kori Kent at kkent@uark.edu

Headlines

PetSmart CEO J.K. Symancyk to Speak at Walton College Commencement

J.K. Symancyk is an alumnus of the Sam M. Walton College of Business and serves on the Dean’s Executive Advisory Board.

Faulkner Center, Arkansas PBS Partner to Screen Documentary 'Gospel'

The Faulkner Performing Arts Center will host a screening of Gospel, a documentary exploring the origin of Black spirituality through sermon and song, in partnership with Arkansas PBS at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 2.

UAPD Officers Mills and Edwards Honored With New Roles

Veterans of the U of A Police Department, Matt Mills has been promoted to assistant chief, and Crandall Edwards has been promoted to administrative captain.

Community Design Center's Greenway Urbanism Project Wins LIV Hospitality Design Award

"Greenway Urbanism" is one of six urban strategies proposed under the Framework Plan for Cherokee Village, a project that received funding through an Our Town grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Spring Bike Drive Refurbishes Old Bikes for New Students

All donated bikes will be given to Pedal It Forward, a local nonprofit that will refurbish your bike and return it to the U of A campus to be gifted to a student in need. Hundreds of students have already benefited.

News Daily