Jennifer Kubota

Jennifer Kubota

Associate Professor, Department of Political Science and International Relations
Director, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
 302-831-4813

Office location

University of Delaware, 105 The Green, Room 129, Wolf Hall, Newark, DE 19716

Lab

773-270-3228 / ifsnlab@gmail.com / 800 Barksdale Road, Newark, DE 19711

Education

  • Ph.D. – University of Colorado, Boulder
  • B.A. – University of Wisconsin, Madison

Biography

Jennifer Kubota, Ph.D., is an associate professor in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at the University of Delaware. She holds a joint appointment in the Department of Political Science and International Relations. She is the co-director of the Impression Formation Social Neuroscience Lab.

Kubota received a joint Ph.D. in social psychology and neuroscience from the University of Colorado, Boulder. She then held a postdoctoral fellowship in social neuroscience at New York University, during which she worked on projects related to the neural foundations of racial bias.

Kubota's research explores how we achieve equity in intergroup relations. She examines how we form impressions of marginalized individuals or those who are different from us; how those impressions influence our thoughts, feelings, and decisions; and how we may intervene to achieve parity or improve interactions. As a social neuroscientist, her research crosses disciplinary boundaries, bridging psychology, neuroscience, and decision-making with the goal of understanding real-world social change.

Kubota's work has been published in various neuroscience and psychology journals, including Nature Neuroscience, Nature Human Behaviour, Psychological Science, Perspectives in Psychological Science, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Biological Psychology, and Social, Cognitive, and Affective Neuroscience. She has received funding from the Army Research Institute, Ford Foundation, National Institute on Aging, and the National Science Foundation in support of her research.​

Courses Regularly Taught

​PSYC867 Prejudice, Stereotyping, and Discrimination

PSYC493 Hate and Extremism

PSYC489 The Implicit Mind

PSYC492 Prejudice, Stereotyping, and Discrimination 

Research Projects

Area: Social Psychology

The rapid increase in the racial diversity of our population provides us with growing opportunities to interact with other-race individuals. Whereas investigations of how interracial contact shapes intergroup attitudes and person evaluation have a long scholarly tradition, little is known about how interracial contact influences social cognition beyond intergroup relations. In this line of research, we utilize social cognitive tasks and neuroimaging (fMRI/EEG) to examine how individual differences in intergroup contact across the lifespan influence various social cognitive abilities. We are currently testing potential behavioral and neural consequences of contact diversity in the context of mentalizing ability.

Researchers: Jasmin Cloutier and Jennifer Kubota

Another research question surrounds whether and how implicit and explicit associations interact with visual components of the environment. This area of inquiry also explores how variation in the target individual's features, and in the perceiver's stereotype endorsement, facilitate or hinder social categorization and stereotyping.

Researchers: Jasmin Cloutier and Jennifer Kubota

Using fMRI and EEG, we examine how the availability and use of person-knowledge impacts neural activity when perceiving and evaluating others based on physical cues (i.e., a judgment that requires no person-knowledge) or person-knowledge (e.g., an individual’s past behavior). The goal of these projects is to uncover the processes supporting the use of each kind of information and to identify how individuals weight the various kinds of information when forming impressions and making decisions.

Researchers: Jasmin Cloutier and Jennifer Kubota

We are currently conducting a series of projects examining the perception of police officer-civilian interactions. The growing number of publicly available video recordings of police officer-civilian interactions has elicited divergent public opinions ranging from complete justification of the officer to calls for criminal charges against the officer. Accordingly, this work is timely and aims to identify how the individual differences of perceivers impact evaluations of both the police officer and civilian. This project explores fundamental social cognitive processes (i.e., implicit and explicit associations) and real-world outcomes (e.g., perceptions of aggression and legitimacy) using fMRI, stress reactivity, and eye-tracking.

Researchers: Jasmin Cloutier and Jennifer Kubota

Our lab systematically investigates the perception of status (i.e., hierarchical rank) and its consequences for how we attend to and evaluate others. In our recently published social neuroscience framework for the study of status, we distinguish between (1) status dimensions (i.e., domains in which an individual may be ranked, such as wealth), and (2) status level (i.e., one’s rank along a given dimension). One key takeaway from this distinction is that one's status level may depend on the status dimension in question (e.g., low in financial status, high in moral status). These differences may have important consequences for how we evaluate and interact with those occupying different positions in a given social hierarchy. Additionally, we are interested in how different contexts and status cues may shape status-based evaluations and decisions. Inspired by our social neuroscience framework for the study of status-based evaluations, we are currently exploring how status may interact with salient visible social categories such as race, age, and gender. This work uses a combination of classic social cognitive tasks and neuroimaging (fMRI/EEG).

Researchers: Jasmin Cloutier and Jennifer Kubota

Representative Publications

Kubota, J.T. (2024). Uncovering Implicit Racial Bias in the Brain: The past, present, and
future. Daedalus, 153, 84-105.

Kubota, J.T., Venezia, S., Gautam, R., Wilhelm, A.L., Mattan, B.D., Cloutier, J., & (2023).
Distrust as a form of inequality, Scientific Reports, 13, 9901. 

Dang, T.P., Mattan, B.D., Handley, G., Barth, D.M., Cloutier, J., & Kubota, J.T. (2022).
Perceiving social injustice during arrests of Black and White civilians by White police officers: An fMRI investigation. NeuroImage, 255, 119153.

More publications

Mattan, B.D., Barth, D.M., Thompson, A., FeldmanHall, O., Cloutier, J., & Kubota, J.T.
(2020). Punishing the privileged: Selfish offers from high-status allocators elicit greater punishment from third-party arbitrators. PloS One, 15(5), e0232369.

Dang, T.P., Cloutier, J., & Kubota, J.T. (2020). IPOC Database: A free database of interracial
police officer-civilian interaction videos. Social Cognition, 38(3), 179-196.

Mattan, B.D., & Kubota, J.T. (2020). Status beyond what meets the eye. Nature Human
Behaviour, 4
(3), 233-234.

Mattan, B.D., Wei, K.Y., Cloutier, J., & Kubota, J.T. (2018). The social neuroscience of race-
and status-based prejudice. Current Opinion in Psychology, 24, 27-34. 

Mattan, B.D.*, Kubota, J.T.*, Li, T., Venezia, S.A., & Cloutier, J. (2019). Implicit evaluative biases
toward targets varying in race and socioeconomic status. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 45(10), 1512-1527.  

Mattan, B.D.*, Kubota, J.T.*, Dang. T., & Cloutier, J. (2018). Motivation modulates brain
networks in response to faces varying in race and status: A multivariate approach. ENeuro, 5(4). * shared first author

Mattan, B.D.*, Kubota, J.*, Dang. T., & Cloutier, J. (2018). External motivation to avoid prejudice alters neural responses to targets varying in race and status. Social, Cognitive, and Affective Neuroscience, 13(1), 22–31.    *shared first author

Kubota, J.T., Peiso, J., Marcum, K., & Cloutier, J. (2017). Intergroup contact throughout the lifespan modulates implicit racial biases across perceivers' racial group. PLOS One, 12(7), e0180440.

Mattan, B., Kubota, J.T., & Cloutier, J. (2017). How social status shapes person perception and evaluation: A social neuroscience perspective. Perspectives in Psychological Science, 12(3), 468-507.

Kubota, J. T., & Ito, T. A. (2017). Rapid race perception despite individuation and accuracy goals. Social Neuroscience, 12(4), 468-478.

Dunsmoor, J., Kubota, J.T., Li, J., Augusto, C., & Phelps, E. A. (2016). Racial stereotypes impair flexibility of emotional learning. Social, Cognitive, and Affective Neuroscience, 11(9), 1363-1373.

Kubota, J. T., Mojdehbakhsh, R., Raio, C., Brosch, T., Uleman, J. S., & Phelps, E. A.(2014). Stressing the person: Legal and everyday person attributions under stress. Biological Psychology, 103, 117-124.

Kubota, J. T., & Ito, T.A. (2014). The role of expression and race in weapons identification. Emotion, 14(6), 1115-1124.

Kubota, J. T., Li, J., Bar-David, E., Banaji, M. R., & Phelps, E. A. (2013). The price of racial bias: Intergroup negotiations in the Ultimatum Game. Psychological Science, 24(12), 2498-2504.

Kubota, J. T., Banaji, M. R., & Phelps, E. A. (2012). The neuroscience of race. Nature Neuroscience, 15(7), 940-948.

Kubota, J. T., & Ito, T. A. (2007). Multiple cues in social perception: The time course of processing race and facial expression. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 43(5), 738-752.

Amodio, D. M., Kubota, J. T., Harmon-Jones, E., & Devine, P. G. (2006). Alternative mechanisms for regulating racial responses according to internal versus external cues. Social, Cognitive, and Affective Neuroscience, 1(1), 26-36.

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