Matthew Campbell
· Instructional Associate Professor, Performance and Visual StudiesTexas A&M University · Performance Studies
Active 1996–2024
About
Matthew Campbell is an Instructional Associate Professor in the Performance and Visual Studies program at Texas A&M University College of Performance, Visualization & Fine Arts. His contact information includes a phone number, 206.650.6038, and an email address, m.a.campbell@tamu.edu. His office is located in LAAH 123 at the address 797 Lamar St., College Station, TX 77843. The page indicates his affiliation with the college's interdisciplinary approach to arts education, encompassing dance, music, theatre, visual arts, computing in the arts, and writing in the arts. Further details about his specific research focus, background, or key contributions are not provided on the page.
Research topics
- Sociology
- Psychology
- Social psychology
- Computer Science
- Cognitive psychology
- Biology
- Biochemistry
- Gender studies
- Linguistics
- Chemistry
- Pharmacology
- Developmental psychology
Selected publications
Is a Picture Worth A Thousand Words? An Experiment Comparing Observer-Based Skin Tone Measures
Race and Social Problems · 2020 · 55 citations
1st authorCorresponding- Computer Science
- Psychology
- Social psychology
Social Psychology Quarterly · 2020 · 8 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Sociology
- Psychology
- Social psychology
Previous research has reported that white survey interviewers remember black respondents’ skin tones in a much narrower range than recollections by black interviewers. This finding has been used to suggest that, in line with the one-drop rule, whites do not perceive meaningful differences between light- and dark-skinned black people. The authors reanalyze evidence thought to demonstrate relative homogeneity in white interviewers’ evaluation of black skin tones. In contrast to previous studies, this examination of several data sources reveals significant heterogeneity in the ratings assigned by white interviewers when taking into account the ordinal nature of the skin tone measures. The results are consistent with theories of social cognition that emphasize that beyond formal racial classification schemes, skin tone is used to implicitly categorize others along a continuum of “blackness.” The findings also align with research suggesting that rather than nullifying within-race skin tone, increases in white racism intensify white colorism.
Purinergic Signalling · 2020 · 24 citations
- Biochemistry
- Pharmacology
- Chemistry
Frequent coauthors
- 22 shared
Malini Natarajarathinam
Texas A&M University
- 13 shared
Mary McDougal
Mitchell Institute
- 13 shared
Wei Lü
Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute and Hospital
- 13 shared
Lauren N. Holder
Texas A&M University
- 9 shared
Bruce Herbert
- 6 shared
Jitesh P. Jani
- 6 shared
Kevin Coleman
- 6 shared
Stefanus J. Steyn
Pfizer (United States)
Labs
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