Two studies focused on perceived ingroup and outgroup variability in children as a function of status. In the first study, 7- and 9-year-old White and Black children distributed White and Black faces along the levels of several dimensions. White children perceived more ingroup than outgroup variability, whereas Black children perceived more outgroup than ingroup variability. In addition, White children favored their ingroup, whereas Black children did not. In a second study, 7- and 9-year-old boys and girls distributed ingroup and outgroup faces along the levels of several dimensions. As expected, boys displayed outgroup homogeneity and girls did not. The consequences of these findings are discusse
The present study sought to determine whether children discriminate between different group types wi...
Partial funding for Open Access provided by the UMD Libraries' Open Access Publishing Fund.Children’...
This study addresses self-categorization theory's contention that stereotype content varies as a fun...
In investigating intergroup attitudes, previous research in developmental psychology has frequently ...
This study examined how social reality restricts children’s tendency for in-group favoritism in grou...
Previous developmental research has consistently detected the presence of an explicit and implicit i...
Abstract We investigated when young children first dehumanise outgroups. Across two studies, 5- and ...
Drawing upon self-categorization theory, we predicted that the content of children's stereotypes con...
The goal of this article was to investigate an indirect form of intergroup differentiation in childr...
Tested predictions drawn from social identity development theory (SIDT) in a study of Anglo-Australi...
Abstract: A developmental model of subjective group dynamics suggests that social identity is sustai...
This study examined relationships between level of racial prejudice, as measured by the Multiple-Res...
The consensusfrom the developmental literature examining children 's intergroup at-titudes has ...
Judgments of intragroup variability were examined as a function of relative group status and identif...
Based on self-categorization theory (SCT; Turner, Hogg, Oakes, Reicher, & Wetherell, 1987), this stu...
The present study sought to determine whether children discriminate between different group types wi...
Partial funding for Open Access provided by the UMD Libraries' Open Access Publishing Fund.Children’...
This study addresses self-categorization theory's contention that stereotype content varies as a fun...
In investigating intergroup attitudes, previous research in developmental psychology has frequently ...
This study examined how social reality restricts children’s tendency for in-group favoritism in grou...
Previous developmental research has consistently detected the presence of an explicit and implicit i...
Abstract We investigated when young children first dehumanise outgroups. Across two studies, 5- and ...
Drawing upon self-categorization theory, we predicted that the content of children's stereotypes con...
The goal of this article was to investigate an indirect form of intergroup differentiation in childr...
Tested predictions drawn from social identity development theory (SIDT) in a study of Anglo-Australi...
Abstract: A developmental model of subjective group dynamics suggests that social identity is sustai...
This study examined relationships between level of racial prejudice, as measured by the Multiple-Res...
The consensusfrom the developmental literature examining children 's intergroup at-titudes has ...
Judgments of intragroup variability were examined as a function of relative group status and identif...
Based on self-categorization theory (SCT; Turner, Hogg, Oakes, Reicher, & Wetherell, 1987), this stu...
The present study sought to determine whether children discriminate between different group types wi...
Partial funding for Open Access provided by the UMD Libraries' Open Access Publishing Fund.Children’...
This study addresses self-categorization theory's contention that stereotype content varies as a fun...