Consistent with balance theory, it was predicted that a balance is reached when the self and the ingroup are perceived in a similar way, leading participants to more rapid judgments and fewer errors judging the self and the ingroup. The goal of this study was to replicate and extend the results obtained by Smith and Henry (1996) who concluded that ingroup attributes become part of the self-image, thus facilitating the accessibility of self-information. In the present study, we included a condition measuring reaction times for ingroup ratings (as opposed to self-ratings) and found that both ingroup and self-ratings were facilitated when the self- and the ingroup descriptions matched. Therefore it is proposed that a common self-ingroup repres...
Smith and collaborators presented strong response time evidence for overlapping mental representatio...
The present article introduces a model based on cognitive consistency principles to predict how new ...
People see their own group as more typical of a larger, superordinate category than they see other, ...
Consistent with balance theory, it was predicted that a balance is reached when the self and the ing...
Consistent with balance theory, it was predicted that a balance is reached when the self and the ing...
Smith and collaborators presented strong response time evidence for overlapping mental representatio...
This article presents a basic conceptualization of ingroup identi-fication as the degree to which th...
Two experiments examined how people respond to upward social comparisons in terms of the extent to w...
The present paper investigates how cognitive projection processes instigate social identification. W...
The present work looks at the self-stereotyping process and reveals its underlying cognitive structu...
Recent studies on intergroup behavior have emphasized shifts in self-concept in intergroup behavior,...
This thesis examined the condit:,ns under which assimilative and contrastive responses would be obse...
How do people determine what an ingroup looks like? Past research using a minimal group paradigm sug...
People see their own group as more typical of a larger, superordinate category than they see other, ...
Social identification denotes individuals' psychological bond with their ingroup. It is an indispens...
Smith and collaborators presented strong response time evidence for overlapping mental representatio...
The present article introduces a model based on cognitive consistency principles to predict how new ...
People see their own group as more typical of a larger, superordinate category than they see other, ...
Consistent with balance theory, it was predicted that a balance is reached when the self and the ing...
Consistent with balance theory, it was predicted that a balance is reached when the self and the ing...
Smith and collaborators presented strong response time evidence for overlapping mental representatio...
This article presents a basic conceptualization of ingroup identi-fication as the degree to which th...
Two experiments examined how people respond to upward social comparisons in terms of the extent to w...
The present paper investigates how cognitive projection processes instigate social identification. W...
The present work looks at the self-stereotyping process and reveals its underlying cognitive structu...
Recent studies on intergroup behavior have emphasized shifts in self-concept in intergroup behavior,...
This thesis examined the condit:,ns under which assimilative and contrastive responses would be obse...
How do people determine what an ingroup looks like? Past research using a minimal group paradigm sug...
People see their own group as more typical of a larger, superordinate category than they see other, ...
Social identification denotes individuals' psychological bond with their ingroup. It is an indispens...
Smith and collaborators presented strong response time evidence for overlapping mental representatio...
The present article introduces a model based on cognitive consistency principles to predict how new ...
People see their own group as more typical of a larger, superordinate category than they see other, ...