Kimberly Kahn
Associate Professor
Department of Psychology
Portland State University
Dr. Kahn's research interests include implicit stereotyping, stereotypicality biases, racial bias in police behavior, stereotype threat, intersectionality and discrimination in transit behavior.
Email: kimbkahn@pdx.edu
Related news
- Walking while Black: The inequitable intersection of racism at the intersection
- Racial Bias in Crosswalks? Study Says Yes
- UA study finds racial bias at crosswalks
- UA Study: Drivers Exhibit Racial Bias Toward Pedestrians
- 'Walking while black' can be dangerous too, study finds
- Research Investigates Racially Disparate Crosswalk Interactions
- Study examines racial bias at crosswalks
- PSU study shows drivers less likely to stop for, more likely to crowd black pedestrians
- VISION ZERO | Stop for Flock’s Sake! Every intersection is a crosswalk.
- VISION ZERO | New signs at crosswalks remind drivers to stop for people walking or rolling, as first step in a larger public education campaign
- Racial bias concerns and staffing shortage present enforcement challenges for Portland Police
- PSU study: Cars unlikely to stop for black pedestrians
- London Tests a Better Crosswalk
- Portland Crosswalk Shows How Drivers Think (or Don’t) About Pedestrians
- Walking While Black: New Research Examines Why It's So Dangerous
- When “Pedestrian Error” Doesn’t Tell the Whole Story
- When Whites Just Don’t Get It, Part 7
- Portland drivers 'clearly' show racial bias at crosswalks, PSU study says (poll)
- Do Drivers Discriminate Against Minorities at Crosswalks?
- Crossing the road is more dangerous for African Americans: New study
- Study Suggests It's More Dangerous For Black Pedestrians To Cross The Street
- Study finds racial bias in driver reactions to pedestrians at Portland crosswalks.
- Traffic violence in the Pacific Northwest is racially biased
- PSU study: Are Portland drivers racist?