Results 181 to 190 of about 2,868 (199)
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Social comparison and group interest in ingroup favouritism

European Journal of Social Psychology, 1979
AbstractStudied the effects of reward magnitude and comparability of the outgroup on minimal intergroup discrimination where self‐interest was related to ingroup profit. Favouritism towards own group is hypothesized to arise from intergroup comparisons to enhance self‐esteem as well as instrumental rivalry for group and self‐interest.
J. C. Turner, R. J. Brown, H. Tajfel
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Social comparison, similarity and ingroup favouritism‐A replication

European Journal of Social Psychology, 1984
AbstractStudied the effects of different kinds of similarity between social groups on ingroup favouritism using a modified replication of an experiment by Turner (1978). Instead of replicating the results of Turner, the data showed just the opposite. They are discussed within the framework of social identity theory.
Amélie Mummendey   +1 more
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The effects of ingroup and outgroup homogeneity on ingroup favouritism, stereotyping and overestimation of relative ingroup size

European Journal of Social Psychology, 1990
AbstractAn experiment (n = 61) investigated the effects of ingroup and outgroup homogeneity on ingroup favouritism, stereotyping and the overestimation of relative ingroup size. As predicted, outgroup homogeneity was conducive to ingroup favouritism. Ingroup homogeneity, however, failed to influence ingroup favouritism.
Simon, B.   +6 more
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National stereotypes: common representations and ingroup favouritism

European Journal of Social Psychology, 1996
Issues studied by Peabody (1985) in a study of national stereotypes were investigated again in a secondary analysis of public opinion data from the general public in a number of European countries. A convergence in stereotyping among perceiver groups was shown. In contrast with Peabody's results, strong ingroup favouritism was found.
Koomen, W., Bahler, M.
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Ingroup Favouritism and Outgroup Derogation among Swedish-speaking Finns

Nordic Psychology, 2006
We studied the continuity of intergroup bias across two generations among the Swedish-speaking Finns.
KARMELA LIEBKIND   +2 more
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Developmental Changes in Ingroup Favouritism among Bilingual and Unilingual Francophone and Anglophone Students

Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 1993
Relations between bilingualism and intergroup attitudes are examined among 663 Francophone students in Quebec, 521 Anglophone cadets at an Ontario military college, and in a longitudinal Anglophone 271-student sample from an Ontario university. In each of the three samples, among older students, unilinguals display ingroupfavouritism; bilinguals do ...
Serge Guimond, Douglas L. Palmer
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Effect of self‐construal and threat to self‐esteem on ingroup favouritism: Moderating effect of independent/interdependent self‐construal on use of ingroup favouritism for maintaining and enhancing self‐evaluation

Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 2008
The present study examined the hypothesis that in situations that threaten self‐esteem, people with independent self‐construal show more ingroup favouritism, whereas people with interdependent self‐construal do not. Using a minimal group paradigm, consistent with the hypothesis, the results showed that self‐construal and threats to self‐esteem have an ...
Ken'ichiro Nakashima   +2 more
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‘Do the Right Thing’ for Whom? An Experiment on Ingroup Favouritism, Group Assortativity and Moral Suasion

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2019
In this paper we investigate the effect of moral suasion on ingroup favouritism. We report a well-powered, pre-registered, two-stage 2x2 mixed-design experiment. In the first stage, groups are formed on the basis of how participants answer to a set of questions, concerning non-morally relevant issues in one treatment (assortativity on non-moral ...
Ennio Bilancini   +4 more
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Self-categorization and Autism: Exploring the Relationship Between Autistic Traits and Ingroup Favouritism in the Minimal Group Paradigm

Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2019
The Integrated self-categorization model of autism (ISCA) argues that a self-categorization dysfunction could be the link between some of the disparate features of ASD. To the extent that this is true, any social psychological phenomena arising from self-categorization should be impaired in autistic people.
Bertschy, Kristen   +2 more
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Ingroup favouritism and outgroup favouritism in low status minimal groups: differential responses to status‐related and status‐unrelated measures

European Journal of Social Psychology, 1997
To account for the inconsistent findings from previous studies of group status and discrimination, it was hypothesized that low status groups defer to the high status outgroup on measures perceived as related to the status dimension, but favour the ingroup on status-unrelated measures.
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