Two experiments were conducted to assess the impact of status differentials on subgroup attitudes and behaviours. In Experiment 1, 73 maths-science students were led to believe they had higher or lower status than humanities students. They then performed a non-interactive decision-making task during which they were categorized exclusively as a university student (superordinate condition), or as a university student and maths-science student simultaneously (subgroups condition). Experiment 2 (N = 98) differed from Experiment I in that perceptions of relative subgroup status were measured rather than manipulated. Consistent with social identity theory, subgroup members tended to categorize themselves more at the superordinate (university) lev...
Judgments of intragroup variability were examined as a function of relative group status and identif...
Two studies examined the effects of perceptions of similarity on relations between subgroups (humani...
According to social identity theory, striving of group members for enhancement of their social ident...
Status and power covary such that higher status groups are typically higher power gro...
The authors examined whether status differences moderate the effects of common fate on subgroup rela...
An experimental paradigm was used to examine how manipulations of group status (higher, equal, or lo...
Two studies examined relations between groups (humanities and math-science students) that implicitly...
In a laboratory experiment we test the interaction effects of status and group identity on interpers...
The study of status differences between groups has been an important topic in intergroup relations r...
77 p.Based on Social Identity Theory, it was hypothesized that lower and higher status groups acknow...
The theory of status characteristics (Berger, Cohen, and Zelditch, 1966; Berger and Zelditch, 1977) ...
This experiment examined how structural characteristics of an intergroup relationship influence the ...
A number of studies have found that high status groups tend to discriminate more than low status gro...
We test the proposition, derived from social identity theory and the subjective group dynamics model...
Social psychological processes underlying intergroup behaviour should be placed in their sociostruct...
Judgments of intragroup variability were examined as a function of relative group status and identif...
Two studies examined the effects of perceptions of similarity on relations between subgroups (humani...
According to social identity theory, striving of group members for enhancement of their social ident...
Status and power covary such that higher status groups are typically higher power gro...
The authors examined whether status differences moderate the effects of common fate on subgroup rela...
An experimental paradigm was used to examine how manipulations of group status (higher, equal, or lo...
Two studies examined relations between groups (humanities and math-science students) that implicitly...
In a laboratory experiment we test the interaction effects of status and group identity on interpers...
The study of status differences between groups has been an important topic in intergroup relations r...
77 p.Based on Social Identity Theory, it was hypothesized that lower and higher status groups acknow...
The theory of status characteristics (Berger, Cohen, and Zelditch, 1966; Berger and Zelditch, 1977) ...
This experiment examined how structural characteristics of an intergroup relationship influence the ...
A number of studies have found that high status groups tend to discriminate more than low status gro...
We test the proposition, derived from social identity theory and the subjective group dynamics model...
Social psychological processes underlying intergroup behaviour should be placed in their sociostruct...
Judgments of intragroup variability were examined as a function of relative group status and identif...
Two studies examined the effects of perceptions of similarity on relations between subgroups (humani...
According to social identity theory, striving of group members for enhancement of their social ident...