“…Some research has also examined the willingness to use the category multiracial (vs. monoracial categories; e.g., Chen & Hamilton, 2012; Chen et al, 2014; Gaither, Chen, et al, 2018; Pauker et al, 2018; Peery & Bodenhausen, 2008; see Chen, 2019, for a review) or the tendency to categorize multiracial people as non-White, but not necessarily as members of their minority parent group (when ancestry is unknown; Chen, Pauker, et al, 2018; Nicolas et al, 2019). Beyond categorization, one paper has also examined perceivers’ attributions about which of a multiracial person’s background was most formative, as a function of the motivation to raise the standing of one group versus another (McClanahan et al, 2019). It would be useful to identify intergroup motives and conditions that give rise to these categorization and attribution patterns too (e.g., if there are similarities to what drives outgroup categorization).…”