Results 211 to 220 of about 3,027,766 (252)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
The Journal of Social Psychology, 2001
In 2 studies, the author examined the effect of collective self-esteem (CSE; J. Crocker & R. Luhtanen, 1993) on people's willingness to display in-group favoritism. To test that self-esteem hypothesis, he measured public CSE, rather than private CSE, because the former parallels a threat to social identity, a state believed to motivate in-group ...
David De Cremer
openaire +5 more sources
In 2 studies, the author examined the effect of collective self-esteem (CSE; J. Crocker & R. Luhtanen, 1993) on people's willingness to display in-group favoritism. To test that self-esteem hypothesis, he measured public CSE, rather than private CSE, because the former parallels a threat to social identity, a state believed to motivate in-group ...
David De Cremer
openaire +5 more sources
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1996
In an examination of group members' responses to the threat of negative in-group characterizations, sorority/fraternity members were asked to rate themselves, their own sorority/fraternity, sororities/ fraternities in general, and students in general on attributes that were stereotypic of sororities/ fraternities.
M, Biernat, T K, Vescio, M L, Green
openaire +2 more sources
In an examination of group members' responses to the threat of negative in-group characterizations, sorority/fraternity members were asked to rate themselves, their own sorority/fraternity, sororities/ fraternities in general, and students in general on attributes that were stereotypic of sororities/ fraternities.
M, Biernat, T K, Vescio, M L, Green
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2002
This research was conducted to explore the impact of assimilation and differentiation needs on content-specific self-stereotyping. According to optimal distinctiveness theory (M. B. Brewer, 1991), social identities serve the function of satisfying individuals' need for assimilation (in-group inclusion) and their need for differentiation ...
Cynthia L, Pickett +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
This research was conducted to explore the impact of assimilation and differentiation needs on content-specific self-stereotyping. According to optimal distinctiveness theory (M. B. Brewer, 1991), social identities serve the function of satisfying individuals' need for assimilation (in-group inclusion) and their need for differentiation ...
Cynthia L, Pickett +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Self-Stereotyping as a Route to System Justification
Social Cognition, 2011Endorsing complementary stereotypes about others (i.e., stereotypes consisting of a balance of positive and negative characteristics) can function to satisfy the need to perceive one's social system as fair and balanced. To what extent might this also apply to self-perception, or self-stereotyping?
Kristin Laurin +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Ingroup bias: the effect of self-stereotyping, identification and group threat
European Journal of Social Psychology, 1999Following Self-Categorization Theory, the present study argues that self-stereotyping should be considered in examining the relationship between identification and ingroup bias. A study among Iranians living in the Netherlands was conducted. It was found that identification was related to self-stereotyping under conditions of group threat.
Maykel Verkuyten, Shervin Nekuee
openaire +3 more sources
Self-stereotyping in the context of multiple social identities.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2006This research examines self-stereotyping in the context of multiple social identities and shows that self-stereotyping is a function of stereotyped expectancies held in particular relationships. Participants reported how others evaluated their math and verbal ability and how they viewed their own ability when their gender or ethnicity was salient ...
Stacey, Sinclair +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Evidence on Self-Stereotyping and the Contribution of Ideas *
The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2014Abstract We use a lab experiment to explore the factors that predict an individual’s decision to contribute her idea to a group. We find that contribution decisions depend on the interaction of gender and the gender stereotype associated with the decision-making domain: conditional on measured ability, individuals are less willing to ...
openaire +2 more sources
Self-stereotyping as “Evangelical Republican”: An Empirical Test
Politics and Religion, 2013AbstractThe prominence of evangelical Christians in the electoral base of the Republican Party is a noted feature of recent American elections. This prominence is linked to a key stereotype that saturates public discourse: “born-again/evangelical Republicanism.” The stereotype fuses religious and partisan social group membership to create a composite ...
openaire +3 more sources
It was hypothesized that, in natural group contexts, low-status in-group membership would be highly accessible, whereas membership to high-status groups would not.
Mara Cadinu, Silvia Galdì
exaly +2 more sources

