People sometimes prefer groups to which they do not belong (outgroups) over their own groups (ingroups). Many long-standing theoretical perspectives assume that this outgroup favorability bias primarily reflects negative ingroup evaluations rather than positive outgroup evaluations. To examine the contributions of negative ingroup versus positive outgroup evaluations to outgroup bias, we examined participants' data (total n > 879,000) from Implicit Association Tests [A. G. Greenwald, D. E. McGhee, J. L. K. Schwartz, J. Pers. Soc. Psychol. 74, 1464-1480 (1998)] measuring intergroup attitudes across four social domains in exploratory and preregistered confirmatory analyses. Process modeling [F. R. Conrey, J. W. Sherman, B. Gawronski, K. Hu...
We test a novel framework for how ingroup members are perceived during intergroup interaction. Acros...
categorization, people favor ingroup members in terms of evaluations, attributions, material resourc...
Individuals have a tendency to evaluate their own membership group (the ingroup) more favorably than...
The generalization of attitudes toward individual outgroup members into attitudes toward the outgrou...
There is considerable evidence that predictions about others' behavior are anchored to comparable ju...
The current article investigated how individuals evaluate ingroup members displaying either ingroup ...
Ingroup bias, which refers to people’s tendency to evaluate and treat members of theiringroups ...
This chapter reviews the extensive literature on bias in favor of in-groups at the expense of out-gr...
Mere categorization of individuals into two distinct social categories has been shown to elicit in-g...
Not only do individuals stereotype people belonging to outgroups, but they also stereotype people wh...
This chapter reviews the extensive literature on bias in favor of in-groups at the expense of out-gr...
Mere categorization of individuals into two distinct social categories has been shown to elicit in-g...
Intergroup relations are characterised by favourable and unfavourable biases. Towards one’s own grou...
In everyday life, we are faced with disparate examples of intergroup bias, ranging from a mild tende...
The research in this article explores the structure and content of attributed intergroup beliefs: to...
We test a novel framework for how ingroup members are perceived during intergroup interaction. Acros...
categorization, people favor ingroup members in terms of evaluations, attributions, material resourc...
Individuals have a tendency to evaluate their own membership group (the ingroup) more favorably than...
The generalization of attitudes toward individual outgroup members into attitudes toward the outgrou...
There is considerable evidence that predictions about others' behavior are anchored to comparable ju...
The current article investigated how individuals evaluate ingroup members displaying either ingroup ...
Ingroup bias, which refers to people’s tendency to evaluate and treat members of theiringroups ...
This chapter reviews the extensive literature on bias in favor of in-groups at the expense of out-gr...
Mere categorization of individuals into two distinct social categories has been shown to elicit in-g...
Not only do individuals stereotype people belonging to outgroups, but they also stereotype people wh...
This chapter reviews the extensive literature on bias in favor of in-groups at the expense of out-gr...
Mere categorization of individuals into two distinct social categories has been shown to elicit in-g...
Intergroup relations are characterised by favourable and unfavourable biases. Towards one’s own grou...
In everyday life, we are faced with disparate examples of intergroup bias, ranging from a mild tende...
The research in this article explores the structure and content of attributed intergroup beliefs: to...
We test a novel framework for how ingroup members are perceived during intergroup interaction. Acros...
categorization, people favor ingroup members in terms of evaluations, attributions, material resourc...
Individuals have a tendency to evaluate their own membership group (the ingroup) more favorably than...