by Martin and Rich Lee
Do all Asians really look alike? It’s a common enough experience that many Asian Americans make jokes about it. Known as the cross-race effect, it is a form of bias toward one’s own racial group. But this kind of mistaken identity can have serious negative consequences. It is why eyewitness testimonies are unreliable especially when the witness is a different race from the alleged perpetrator. In less extreme situations, confusing one Asian for another is invalidating and can perpetuate the notion that Asian Americans are outsiders aka foreigners. To overcome cross-race effects, people need to be aware of this ingroup bias, be more attuned to unique features, and interact more across racial groups to appreciate the diversity of appearances.
Martin and Rich Lee are second generation Korean American brothers. Martin is a retired elementary school teacher and the illustrator of the strip. Rich is a professor of psychology in Asian American studies at the University of Minnesota and writes the content.

Website, Instagram, Facebook, Threads, Patreon, Blue Sky, Buy Me a Coffee
Registration is closed for Common Ground: Building Together conference and gala award banquet in San Francisco on January 24. A shoutout to our planning committee: Jane Chin, Frank Mah, Jeannie Young, Akemi Tamanaha, Nathan Soohoo, Mark Young, Dave Liu, and Yiming Fu.
We are published by the non-profit Asian American Media Inc and supported by our readers along with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, AARP, The Henri and Tomoye Takahashi Charitable Foundation, The Asian American Foundation & Koo and Patricia Yuen of the Yuen Foundation.
Find additional content on Bluesky, Facebook, Instagram ,Tiktok, X, and YouTube. Please consider interning or joining our staff. Don’t miss a single headline. Subscribe for free.


