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The rationale of in-group favoritism: An experimental test of three explanations

Games and Economic Behavior, 2020
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Ciccarone G., Di Bartolomeo G., Papa S.
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Language Policies and In-group Favoritism

Social Psychology, 2008
This study investigates the influence of sex of respondent, context valence, and type of generic on the naming of female personalities in Norway where the feminine suffixing has dropped away in reaction to the problem of linguistic sexism. A total of 162 participants were asked to name either their most- or least-liked personalities.
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The Impact of In-group Favoritism on Trade Preferences

International Organization, 2017
AbstractUsing a population-based survey experiment, this study evaluates the role of in-group favoritism in influencing American attitudes toward international trade. By systematically altering which countries gain or lose from a given trade policy (Americans and/or people in trading partner countries), we vary the role that in-group favoritism should ...
Diana C. Mutz, Eunji Kim
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Perspective-taking: Decreasing stereotype expression, stereotype accessibility, and in-group favoritism.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2000
Using 3 experiments, the authors explored the role of perspective-taking in debiasing social thought. In the 1st 2 experiments, perspective-taking was contrasted with stereotype suppression as a possible strategy for achieving stereotype control. In Experiment 1, perspective-taking decreased stereotypic biases on both a conscious and a nonconscious ...
A D, Galinsky, G B, Moskowitz
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Ingroup favoritism in cooperation: A meta-analysis.

Psychological Bulletin, 2014
Although theory suggests individuals are more willing to incur a personal cost to benefit ingroup members, compared to outgroup members, there is inconsistent evidence in support of this perspective. Applying meta-analytic techniques, we harness a relatively recent explosion of research on intergroup discrimination in cooperative decision making to ...
Balliet, D., Wu, J., de Dreu, C.K.W.
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Children's subjective identification with the group and in-group favoritism.

Developmental Psychology, 1998
Recent developments in social psychology have explained children's preference for members of the in-group in terms of processes of self-categorization and identification with the in-group. In contrast, this study, addressing nationality self-conceptions, examines the possibility that even before subjective identification with the group has occurred, as
Bennett, M.   +3 more
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In-Group Favoritism

2018
Lucia, pictured below was a 34-year-old woman who presented with numbness in her fingertips for the past week. She was told she had likely carpal tunnel syndrome and told that her symptoms would improve with weight-loss and the use of splints at night. Lucia’s symptoms gradually abated over the next few weeks. She returned 1 year later with visual loss
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Black Sheep versus In-Group Favoritism

2018
Sometimes people punish offenders from their own group more severely than offenders from a different group (the “black sheep effect”). At other times, however, people punish offenders from a different group more severely than offenders from their own group (the “in-group favorability effect”).
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In-group as part of the self: In-group favoritism is mediated by medial prefrontal cortex activation

Social Neuroscience, 2009
Our identity consists of knowledge about our individual attributes (personal identity) as well as knowledge about our shared attributes derived from our membership in certain social groups (social identity). As individuals seek to achieve a positive self-image, they aim at comparing favorably with other individuals or their in-group comparing favorably
Volz, K., Kessler, T., von Cramon, D.
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Ideological Favoritism and In-Group Favoritism: A Double Dissociation of U.S. Progressives and Conservatives

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
People appreciate others who seem similar to themselves. Two well-documented similarity-attraction effects are in-group favoritism (i.e., preference for in-groups over out-groups) and ideological favoritism (i.e., preference for the groups whose ideologies align [vs.
Johanna Woitzel, Alex Koch
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