Ingroup and outgroup evaluations were investigated as a function of prototypicality threat and distinctiveness threat manipulations, with Procedural Just World beliefs as a moderator. Ninety university undergraduates were randomly assigned to 4 groups: high prototypicality-high distinctiveness, high prototypicality-low distinctiveness, low prototypicality-high distinctiveness, and low prototypicality-low distinctiveness. Participants were given bogus feedback on a bogus personality test. Levels of favouritism and derogation on both ingroup and outgroup were measured. Results supported that predictions of Brewer (1991, 2007)‟s optimal distinctiveness theory may only be reflective of public but not private manifestations of individuals‟ behav...
The present study tried to reconcile assumptions from Terror Management Theory that individual diffe...
The present study examined the effect of intergroup distinctiveness and group membership on evaluati...
Three studies were conducted to examine the predictions that (a) in-group identification depends on ...
The combined influence on ingroup bias of threat to group distinctiveness and prototypicality as a g...
The combined influence on ingroup bias of threat to group distinctiveness and prototypicality as a g...
Threats from both distinctiveness with the outgroup and prototypicality as an ingroup members were i...
The current research aimed to investigate the effects on ingroup and outgroup evaluations when both ...
Distinctiveness threat occurs when the ingroup and outgroup are perceived to be insufficiently diffe...
In four studies, effects of self-perceived or public-perceived threats to group status or group dist...
In four studies, effects of self-perceived or public-perceived threats to group status or group dist...
Two factors increase the threat for individuals’ belief in a just world (BJW) posed by an innocent v...
Recent research suggests that inducing fixed (rather than malleable) beliefs about groups leads to m...
In two studies (Ns=163, 164), the authors tested the prediction that perceptions of group variabilit...
Previous studies investigating the role of self-esteem as a predictor and outcome of intergroup beha...
Group polarization occurs when group members have more extreme views after learning others in the gr...
The present study tried to reconcile assumptions from Terror Management Theory that individual diffe...
The present study examined the effect of intergroup distinctiveness and group membership on evaluati...
Three studies were conducted to examine the predictions that (a) in-group identification depends on ...
The combined influence on ingroup bias of threat to group distinctiveness and prototypicality as a g...
The combined influence on ingroup bias of threat to group distinctiveness and prototypicality as a g...
Threats from both distinctiveness with the outgroup and prototypicality as an ingroup members were i...
The current research aimed to investigate the effects on ingroup and outgroup evaluations when both ...
Distinctiveness threat occurs when the ingroup and outgroup are perceived to be insufficiently diffe...
In four studies, effects of self-perceived or public-perceived threats to group status or group dist...
In four studies, effects of self-perceived or public-perceived threats to group status or group dist...
Two factors increase the threat for individuals’ belief in a just world (BJW) posed by an innocent v...
Recent research suggests that inducing fixed (rather than malleable) beliefs about groups leads to m...
In two studies (Ns=163, 164), the authors tested the prediction that perceptions of group variabilit...
Previous studies investigating the role of self-esteem as a predictor and outcome of intergroup beha...
Group polarization occurs when group members have more extreme views after learning others in the gr...
The present study tried to reconcile assumptions from Terror Management Theory that individual diffe...
The present study examined the effect of intergroup distinctiveness and group membership on evaluati...
Three studies were conducted to examine the predictions that (a) in-group identification depends on ...