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Posted Friday, September 12, 2008 12:17 PM

Even Avatars Are Racist?

Sharon Begley

Now that Americans are hanging around virtual worlds almost as much (it seems) as the real one, research on how we behave in places like Second Life and how things like our choice of avatar spills over into the real world is heating up. As I described in a column last February, players who had super-attractive avatars have an exaggerated view of their real-world appearance and act accordingly. For instance, they believe that especially attractive men or women whose faces they’re shown from an online dating site would be interested in them. (When you have a more realistic view of your attractiveness, you dial down your expectations.) Now a study finds an uglier side to avatars: they display racist attitudes just as real people in the real world do.

 

In the experiment that Paul W. Eastwick and Wendi L. Gardner of Northwestern University describe in a paper called “Is It a Game? Evidence for Social Influence in the Virtual World,” published online in the journal Social Influence, one avatar asked another if he would teleport to Duda Beach (one of the sites in the virtual world There.com) with her and let her take a screenshot of him. (The him’s and her’s are interchangeable here; the scientists used male and female avatars in various permutations.)

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The avatar was more likely to agree if that request had been preceded by a more unreasonable one: teleporting to 50 locations with her to take screenshots. That would have required about two hours of teleporting and traveling—an unreasonable request. When the one-beach request was presented alone, players were less likely to say okay.

 

What seems to happen—and this is true in real life as well—is that when you reject one request, and the requester then makes a second, more moderate one, you reciprocate what you perceive as her “concession” by going from brushing her off to acquiescing.

 

Then the scientists gave the avatar making the request dark skin. While white avatars got about 20 percent more of those they asked to agree to the modest request after the unreasonable one, the increase for the dark-toned avatars was only 8 percent. Even when the avatars modified what they were asking, players still mostly brushed them off.

 

Again back in the real world, decades of psychology studies have shown that whether or not someone agrees to a request under these experimental conditions—and also in real life—depends on whether they think the requester is worthy of impressing, For dark-skin avatars, apparently, the answer is, not so much. I should add that the players knew they were part of a psych study; not even that had a significant effect on (let's just say it) racism.

 

“You would think when you’re wandering around this fantasyland, operating outside of the normal laws of time, space and gravity and meeting all types of strange characters, that you might behave differently,” Eastwick said. “But people exhibited the same type of behavior, and the same type of racial bias, that they show in the real world all the time,” where people are more uncomfortable with minorities and less likely to help them.

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Member Comments

Posted By: ikie12pts (November 7, 2008 at 7:46 PM)

I'm sure that's true, but it's very disconcerting.  Schools have made a huge difference in diminishing feelings of bigotry, but obviously we have a lot more to do.


Posted By: Knathrak (October 28, 2008 at 7:31 PM)

Ive played a ton of MMOs and whenever asked to help someone do something...such as teleporting or whatever, never once has the color of the avatar's skin or the race they were ever impacted my final decision. Most likely the people asking the favor were just unlucky enough to ask at possibly a 'busy' time of day, such as the prime raid time. Seriously...if you are playing a game with tons of races/classes available...id have to say that most likely even a racist person playing wouldnt refuse just because of how an avatar looked. I say that mainly because everyone that plays an MMO knows that you cant really count on the avatar being an accurate reflection of the  player. Of course there ARE the people that get all googly over female avatars...so maybe i am totally wrong.


Posted By: MichaelMN (October 28, 2008 at 1:19 PM)

Racism...?  That's a pretty big jump.  

I'd say that it's likely that its a case of personal attractiveness rather than denegration of a 'racial' type, or any sort of racial stereotyping whatsoever.  Personal preferences can certainly fall along skin color, as well as hair color, eye color, shape of face, body type, etc.   If the study were done using hair color as a means of difererntiating between avatars, might there not be a preference say, towards blondes rather than brunetees?  Would this be hairism?

What was the methodology toward creating the original avatr?  Did they take an avatar that looked good as a Caucasian and then slap a black skin on him?   Did they do the reverse (as they should have to make the experiment valid) take a black avatar and slap a white skin on him?  Did that make a difference?

It takes a lot of guts, and little intelligence, to cry racism over a simple matter of personal attractivness.  Quote some real studies and get back to me.


 
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