Three experiments examined the relationship between prejudice and processing of stereotypic information. Higher levels of prejudice were associated with greater attention to and more thorough encoding of stereotype-inconsistent than stereotype-consistent behaviors but only when processing capacity was plentiful (Experiments 1 and 3). High-prejudice participants attributed consistent behaviors to internal factors and inconsistent behaviors to external forces (Experiment 2). Together, these results suggest that high-prejudice people attend carefully to inconsistent behaviors to explain them away but only if they have sufficient resources to do so. Results also showed that low-prejudice but not high-prejudice participants formed individuated i...
Based on the logic that stereotypes are accessible among people who use them often, the authors susp...
This article challenges the highly intuitive assumption that prejudice should be less likely in publ...
Based on the logic that stereotypes are accessible among people who use them often, the authors susp...
Three experiments examined the relationship between prejudice and processing of stereotypic informat...
Three experiments tested the hypothesis that people high and low in prejudice respond similarly to d...
In two experiments, we investigated the relationships among stereotype strength, processing capacity...
This research examines how attention and accuracy motivation moderate stereo-typing in person percep...
Item does not contain fulltextThere is a growing body of evidence indicating that people spontaneous...
Stereotype-confirming biases are well documented in the social psychological literature. However, mo...
Stereotype-confirming biases are well documented in the social psychological literature. However, mo...
In line with Susan Fiske and Steven Neuberg's continuum model of impression formation it was found t...
The present dissertation provides insights into the effects of communicative roles on stereotyping a...
Two experiments investigated the validity and reliability of a new, cued-recall measure of stereotyp...
The present dissertation provides insights into the effects of communicative roles on stereotyping a...
Based on the logic that stereotypes are accessible among people who use them often, the authors susp...
Based on the logic that stereotypes are accessible among people who use them often, the authors susp...
This article challenges the highly intuitive assumption that prejudice should be less likely in publ...
Based on the logic that stereotypes are accessible among people who use them often, the authors susp...
Three experiments examined the relationship between prejudice and processing of stereotypic informat...
Three experiments tested the hypothesis that people high and low in prejudice respond similarly to d...
In two experiments, we investigated the relationships among stereotype strength, processing capacity...
This research examines how attention and accuracy motivation moderate stereo-typing in person percep...
Item does not contain fulltextThere is a growing body of evidence indicating that people spontaneous...
Stereotype-confirming biases are well documented in the social psychological literature. However, mo...
Stereotype-confirming biases are well documented in the social psychological literature. However, mo...
In line with Susan Fiske and Steven Neuberg's continuum model of impression formation it was found t...
The present dissertation provides insights into the effects of communicative roles on stereotyping a...
Two experiments investigated the validity and reliability of a new, cued-recall measure of stereotyp...
The present dissertation provides insights into the effects of communicative roles on stereotyping a...
Based on the logic that stereotypes are accessible among people who use them often, the authors susp...
Based on the logic that stereotypes are accessible among people who use them often, the authors susp...
This article challenges the highly intuitive assumption that prejudice should be less likely in publ...
Based on the logic that stereotypes are accessible among people who use them often, the authors susp...