# The effects of race, gender, and alcohol cues on anger perception in crowds

**Authors:** Elizabeth Summerell, Liberty Shuttleworth, Carmen Lin, Thomas F. Denson

PMC · DOI: 10.1080/00049530.2024.2426661 · Australian Journal of Psychology · 2025-01-19

## TL;DR

This study shows people overestimate anger in white crowds and black individuals, which could impact policing and crowd control strategies.

## Contribution

The study reveals racial and gender biases in anger perception within crowds and individuals.

## Key findings

- Participants overestimated anger in white crowds more than black crowds.
- Black individuals were perceived as angrier than white individuals.
- Men were seen as angrier than women in both crowds and individuals.

## Abstract

Anger in crowds can be dangerous and lead to violence. Accurately assessing anger in crowds can be difficult, and people tend to overestimate the average intensity of a crowd’s anger relative to an individual’s anger (i.e. the crowd emotion amplification effect).

Across three experiments, we investigated the emotion amplification effect in crowds (versus individuals) displaying angry facial expressions. We also investigated the influence of gender, race, and alcohol cues as influences on this effect.

In two of the three experiments, we replicated the emotion amplification effect and found an interaction with race. Participants overestimated anger in White crowds more so than anger in Black crowds, but overestimated anger to a greater extent for Black individuals more than White individuals. There was also a main effect such that participants overestimated anger for men relative to women in both individuals and crowds and in both races.

These findings highlight the bias to overestimate anger in White crowds, men, and Black individuals. These findings may affect policies around policing and crowd control.

What is already known about this topic:
Anger in crowds can turn into violence.People tend to overestimate the intensity of anger in crowds relative to individuals.To date, only White faces have been used as stimuli to examine this overestimation effect.

Anger in crowds can turn into violence.

People tend to overestimate the intensity of anger in crowds relative to individuals.

To date, only White faces have been used as stimuli to examine this overestimation effect.

What this topic adds:
White crowds elicited a greater overestimation effect than Black crowds.Conversely, Black individuals elicited a greater overestimation effect than White individuals.These findings may inform crowd control and policing strategies.

White crowds elicited a greater overestimation effect than Black crowds.

Conversely, Black individuals elicited a greater overestimation effect than White individuals.

These findings may inform crowd control and policing strategies.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** alcohol (MESH:D000438)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12218435/full.md

## References

84 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12218435/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12218435