Social stereotypes involve judgments of how typical certain personality traits are of a group. According to the attribution hypothesis, judgments of trait typicality depend on the perceived prevalence of the trait in the target group. According to the categorization hypothesis, such judgments depend on the degree to which a trait is thought to be more or less prevalent in the target group than in a relevant comparison group. A study conducted with women and men as target groups showed that the attribution hypothesis fit the data best when typicality ratings were made in an absolute format. When, however, typicality ratings were made in a comparative format (how typical is the trait of women as compared with men?), both hypotheses received s...
We used a multi-dimensional framework to assess current stereotypes of men and women. Specifically, ...
This paper investigated the hypotheses that (a) inferences from behaviors to traits w...
The current study was conducted to test the hypotheses that categorization and subsequent judgments ...
Social stereotypes involve judgments of how typical certain personality traits are of a group. Accor...
The traditional male-female ordering found in American society may reinforce stereotypic attribution...
This study is based on the theoretical assumption that a detailed understanding of the nature of ste...
Whether group impact social perception is a topic of renewed theoretical and empirical interest. In ...
Using the Katz‐Braly checklist subjects (N = 65) assigned five traits to a national group and estima...
It was hypothesized that, in natural group contexts, low-status in-group membership would be highly ...
Reported are three studies testing social categorization processes and the effects of those categori...
Women are more romantic than men. Scientists are duller than artists. We often make such judgements ...
When judging the attributes of a particular boy or girl, perceivers typically rely on their global e...
Previous research by Latrofa et al. (2010) found that women were more strongly identified with their...
Previous research by Latrofa et al. (2010) found that women were more strongly identified with their...
124 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1993.The present investigation exa...
We used a multi-dimensional framework to assess current stereotypes of men and women. Specifically, ...
This paper investigated the hypotheses that (a) inferences from behaviors to traits w...
The current study was conducted to test the hypotheses that categorization and subsequent judgments ...
Social stereotypes involve judgments of how typical certain personality traits are of a group. Accor...
The traditional male-female ordering found in American society may reinforce stereotypic attribution...
This study is based on the theoretical assumption that a detailed understanding of the nature of ste...
Whether group impact social perception is a topic of renewed theoretical and empirical interest. In ...
Using the Katz‐Braly checklist subjects (N = 65) assigned five traits to a national group and estima...
It was hypothesized that, in natural group contexts, low-status in-group membership would be highly ...
Reported are three studies testing social categorization processes and the effects of those categori...
Women are more romantic than men. Scientists are duller than artists. We often make such judgements ...
When judging the attributes of a particular boy or girl, perceivers typically rely on their global e...
Previous research by Latrofa et al. (2010) found that women were more strongly identified with their...
Previous research by Latrofa et al. (2010) found that women were more strongly identified with their...
124 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1993.The present investigation exa...
We used a multi-dimensional framework to assess current stereotypes of men and women. Specifically, ...
This paper investigated the hypotheses that (a) inferences from behaviors to traits w...
The current study was conducted to test the hypotheses that categorization and subsequent judgments ...