Leaders often carry unconscious bias, meaning fast, automatic judgments about people that operate outside awareness. The Inc. piece distills five practical habits that use neuroplasticity, the brain’s ability to form new pathways, to weaken those judgments and improve daily leadership.
Mindfulness, notice without judging
Mindfulness means paying attention to thoughts, feelings, and body signals with a neutral attitude. Regular practice can make people less reactive, reduce common thinking traps, and weaken automatic links that feed bias. Short trainings have lowered implicit bias in experiments.
Stereotype replacement, swap stories for facts
When a stereotype appears, name it, then bring to mind a real counterexample or verified information about the person in front of you. This “habit breaking” method teaches people to replace old mental links with truer ones and has shown durable effects in research.
Individuation, focus on the person, not the category
Ask curious questions, collect concrete details about the individual, and let those details guide your judgment. Studies find that giving and using individuating information reduces reliance on group stereotypes in how we perceive others.
Prosocial practice, build compassion with loving kindness
A short loving kindness exercise, silently wishing others well, trains attention toward care and connection. Trials show this practice can reduce implicit bias and support more patient, trusting interactions.
Perspective taking, imagine the other person’s view
Picture the situation as the other person sees it. Work at understanding goals, constraints, and feelings, then adjust your behavior. Neuroscience work from Wharton describes how this engages networks for social understanding and can support better decisions and collaboration.
What to keep in mind
Evidence for these tools is promising, yet changes in quick, implicit measures do not always translate into clear behavior change without continued practice and supportive systems. Use the habits together and embed them in hiring, feedback, and team routines.
Penguin Random House – Breaking Bias, Where Stereotypes and Prejudices Come From, and the Science-Backed Method to Unravel Them – 2024
Book page for Anu Gupta’s guide that blends scientific evidence and contemplative tools into a step by step method for unlearning bias, with the PRISM toolkit and a foreword by the Dalai Lama.
Journal of Experimental Psychology, General – The nondiscriminating heart, Lovingkindness meditation training decreases implicit intergroup bias – 2014
Randomized study where loving kindness training reduced implicit bias toward stigmatized groups compared with control conditions, supporting compassion practice as a debiasing tool.
Social Psychological and Personality Science – Mindfulness meditation reduces implicit age and race bias – 2015
Brief mindfulness meditation reduced implicit race and age bias in laboratory tests, consistent with the idea that present moment, nonjudgmental attention can weaken automatic negative associations.
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology – Long term reduction in implicit race bias, A prejudice habit breaking intervention – 2012
Training that teaches people to notice, label, and replace biased responses led to lasting reductions in implicit race bias and increased concern about discrimination, supporting stereotype replacement as a practice.
Current Research in Behavioral Sciences – Effects of individuating information on implicit person perception are largely consistent across individual differences and two types of target groups – 2023
Across multiple studies, providing diagnostic individual information reduced reliance on group stereotypes in implicit person perception, reinforcing individuation as a practical debiasing step.
Greater Good Science Center – Three Ways Mindfulness Can Make You Less Biased – 2017
Review of studies showing that mindfulness can reduce common cognitive biases that drive prejudice, including correspondence and negativity biases, with links to primary research.
Wharton Knowledge at Penn – Perspective taking, a brain hack that can help you make better decisions – 2021
Explains the neural systems behind perspective taking and why imagining others’ views can improve understanding, innovation, and leadership choices.
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