We used two experiments to examine the influence of one's own attitude on the perception of group attitudes. In the first experiment, subjects viewed opinion statements, supposedly made by residents of two towns, on the issue of building a local nuclear power station. One town was large and had frequently occurring statements and the other was small with infrequently occurring statements; there was an equal proportion of pro and anti statements in both towns. The prediction that subjects would perceive an illusory correlation between attitude positions similar to their own (self-relevance) and the infrequently cited (distinctive) town was supported for anti subjects only. Subsequent investigation indicated that this was due to the confoundi...
The acquisition of a negative evaluation of a fictitious minority social group in spite of the absen...
Two studies were conducted to test the predictions of a multi-component model of distinctiveness-bas...
The present research examines the role of categorical perception (McGarty, Haslam, Turner, & Oak...
126 undergraduates with pro- or anti-attitudes toward nuclear power and 15 local members of a campai...
Perceivers tend to overestimate the relative degree of association between an infrequent or dis-tinc...
Individuals tend to select again alternatives about which they have positive impressions and to avoi...
Research has demonstrated that people who embrace different ideological orientations often show diff...
37 Ss were presented with 36 opinion statements ostensibly made by residents of 2 towns (1 large, 1 ...
An experiment (N=60) was conducted to examine the hypothesis that the illusory correlation effect is...
Two studies used an illusory correlation procedure to test whether distinct implicit and explicit ev...
Research suggests that people sometimes perceive a relationship between stimuli when no such relatio...
Distinctiveness‐based illusory correlation effects (ICEs) have been implicated in the formation of n...
The present studies test whether having a 'vested interest' in a particular outcome affects perceive...
Illusory correlation refers to the perceived (but erroneous) relation between stimuli. In social psy...
The illusory correlation model of stereotype formation proposes that stereotypes can arise from the ...
The acquisition of a negative evaluation of a fictitious minority social group in spite of the absen...
Two studies were conducted to test the predictions of a multi-component model of distinctiveness-bas...
The present research examines the role of categorical perception (McGarty, Haslam, Turner, & Oak...
126 undergraduates with pro- or anti-attitudes toward nuclear power and 15 local members of a campai...
Perceivers tend to overestimate the relative degree of association between an infrequent or dis-tinc...
Individuals tend to select again alternatives about which they have positive impressions and to avoi...
Research has demonstrated that people who embrace different ideological orientations often show diff...
37 Ss were presented with 36 opinion statements ostensibly made by residents of 2 towns (1 large, 1 ...
An experiment (N=60) was conducted to examine the hypothesis that the illusory correlation effect is...
Two studies used an illusory correlation procedure to test whether distinct implicit and explicit ev...
Research suggests that people sometimes perceive a relationship between stimuli when no such relatio...
Distinctiveness‐based illusory correlation effects (ICEs) have been implicated in the formation of n...
The present studies test whether having a 'vested interest' in a particular outcome affects perceive...
Illusory correlation refers to the perceived (but erroneous) relation between stimuli. In social psy...
The illusory correlation model of stereotype formation proposes that stereotypes can arise from the ...
The acquisition of a negative evaluation of a fictitious minority social group in spite of the absen...
Two studies were conducted to test the predictions of a multi-component model of distinctiveness-bas...
The present research examines the role of categorical perception (McGarty, Haslam, Turner, & Oak...