Social categorization under minimal group conditions reliably produces intergroup discrimination. It is proposed that this might be because the minimal group paradigm engenders high levels of subjective uncertainty among participants, which causes them to use the categorization to define self and thus identify with the minimal group. Uncertainty is generally an aversive state which may be resolved by identification (Hogg, 1996; Hogg & Abrams, 1993). Thus, people may identify with social categories (and express discrimination) when identification resolves uncertainty. To investigate this idea a standard minimal group experiment was conducted, in which the three independent variables of categorizations, task uncertainty and situational uncert...
A fundamental question of social psychology centers on the nature and definition of social groups. T...
Social and cognitive psychologists have conceptualized judgemental confidence (how strongly a person...
This paper investigates the possibility that individuals selectively identify with groups as a means...
Minimal group studies are sometimes interpreted as showing that social categorization per se inevita...
The role played by social identity theory in responding to the crisis of confidence in social psycho...
Building on the subjective uncertainty reduction model of social identity processes (M. A. Hogg, in ...
Two experiments tested the prediction that uncertainty reduction and self-enhancement motivations ha...
Two studies examined the effects of self-uncertainty and ingroup entitativity on group identificatio...
A motivational extension of social identity theory is proposed: the uncertainty reduction hypothesis...
To study categorization effects in an experimental context the minimal group paradigm has been desig...
Judgments of intragroup variability were examined as a function of relative group status and identif...
The present paper investigates how people identify with groups depending on the clarity of a group's...
This thesis reports an investigation of the phenomenon of intergroup discrimination and its underlyi...
Five experiments were carried out to explore the ways in which individuals structure the social envi...
Four minimal group experiments tested the prediction that judgments of groups and their members refl...
A fundamental question of social psychology centers on the nature and definition of social groups. T...
Social and cognitive psychologists have conceptualized judgemental confidence (how strongly a person...
This paper investigates the possibility that individuals selectively identify with groups as a means...
Minimal group studies are sometimes interpreted as showing that social categorization per se inevita...
The role played by social identity theory in responding to the crisis of confidence in social psycho...
Building on the subjective uncertainty reduction model of social identity processes (M. A. Hogg, in ...
Two experiments tested the prediction that uncertainty reduction and self-enhancement motivations ha...
Two studies examined the effects of self-uncertainty and ingroup entitativity on group identificatio...
A motivational extension of social identity theory is proposed: the uncertainty reduction hypothesis...
To study categorization effects in an experimental context the minimal group paradigm has been desig...
Judgments of intragroup variability were examined as a function of relative group status and identif...
The present paper investigates how people identify with groups depending on the clarity of a group's...
This thesis reports an investigation of the phenomenon of intergroup discrimination and its underlyi...
Five experiments were carried out to explore the ways in which individuals structure the social envi...
Four minimal group experiments tested the prediction that judgments of groups and their members refl...
A fundamental question of social psychology centers on the nature and definition of social groups. T...
Social and cognitive psychologists have conceptualized judgemental confidence (how strongly a person...
This paper investigates the possibility that individuals selectively identify with groups as a means...