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**Original Citation:** Zárate, M.A., Stoever, C.J., MacLin, M.K., Arms-Chavez, C.J. (2008) "Neurocognitive underpinnings of face perception: Further evidence of distinct person and group perception processes." *Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 94*, 108-115. **Target of replication:** Zárate et al. hypothesized that “person-based information about others would inhibit group categorizations in the left hemisphere relative to the right hemisphere for targets of another race or gender than the participant” (Zárate et al., 2008). They found evidence to support their hypothesis suggesting that responses were slower in the left hemisphere condition than in the right hemisphere condition for Latino participants viewing African American targets, F(1,61) = 4.34, p = .0413. **A priori replication criteria:** 188 participants were planned to be recruited. We planned to conduct a 2 (question type: race or gender) x 2 (target race: Latino or African American) x 2 (target type: trained or new) x 2 (visual field: left visual field - right hemisphere or right visual field - left hemisphere) x 2 (participant gender) mixed ANOVA where target type, target race, question type, and visual field were within-participants variables, as in the original paper. We expected to find a four-way interaction between Target Race x Visual Field x Target Type x Participant Gender and a significant interaction decomposed from the previous four-way interaction indicating that responses were slower in the left hemisphere condition than in the right hemisphere condition for trained African American targets. An in progress report is available [here](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1aZml_NXMokjaLfDPW13LWdKL6Cnh3A1x9JGuyefVEw4/edit). The replication is presently underway with no data or analyses to share as of yet.
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