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Prejudice

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Title: Prejudice


1
Prejudice
2
A cognitive view of prejudice
3
Groups
  • Naturally categorize people and objects into
    groups.

4
Minimal Group Paradigm
  • Merely categorize people into groups

5
Implications
  • Out-group homogeneity effect
  • More similar

6
Implications
  • In-group Bias
  • Liking, helping, trait evals

7
Implications
  • Ultimate Attribution Error (Pettigrew, 1979)
  • In-group members-
  • () behavior Internal
  • (-) behavior situation.
  • Out-group members-
  • () behavior situational
  • (-) behavior internal.

8
Stereotypes
  • Categorize individuals
  • Depends on context
  • Association with stereotype

9
Where do stereotypes come from?
  • 1) Culture/Society
  • 2) Personal Needs (group, superiority,
    justification of social order)

10
Stereotypes
  • Activated automatically
  • Lab Priming

11
Devine, 1989
  • Dissociation Model
  • Stereotype Activation Automatic
  • Personal Beliefs Controlled

12
Stereotypes
  • Automatic
  • Why?
  • Content Same
  • Same socialization process

13
Personal Beliefs
  • Controlled (time, resources)
  • Why?
  • Consequences of controlled?

14
  • Note two separate structures
  • Stereotype
  • Beliefs
  • Draw

15
Dissociation Model 3 Studies
  • Study 1 - Thought-listing task

16
Thought ListingHigh Prejudice Low Prejudice
  • Poor .80
  • Aggressive .60
  • Criminal .65
  • Uneducated .50
  • Athletic .75
  • S Perverse .50
  • Lazy .55
  • L Intelligence .50
  • Poor .75
  • Aggressive .60
  • Criminal .80
  • Uneducated .50
  • Athletic .50
  • S Perverse .70
  • Lazy .75
  • L Intelligence .65

17
Study 2 Are stereotypes automatically activated?
  • Part 1 Primed (80/20)
  • Part 2 Donald Story
  • D.V. Trait Ratings (I.e., hostility)
  • PredictionsThis is priming

18
Predictions?
  • 80 versus 20?
  • High-prejudice vs. Low-prejudice Diff?

19
Study 3 Personal Beliefs
  • List as many alternate labels as they were aware
    of for the social group black AmericanAll
    thoughts flattering and unflattering were
    acceptable (p. 13).

20
ResultsHigh-Prejudice Low-Prejudice
  • more negative
  • More traits
  • Themes of hostility, aggression, or violence 60
  • More positive
  • More beliefs
  • Themes of hostility, aggression, or violence 9

21
Conclusions
  • Content Same
  • No controlAutomatic effect
  • ControlHigh, low differentiation

22
  • NOTES E-Mail me

23
Effects of stereotypes
  • Bargh, Chen, Burrows (1996)
  • Primed faces (W/B)
  • Boring130th trial error message
  • Repeat
  • Reaction coded for hostility
  • Video and experimenter

24
Effects of stereotypes
  • Prime old versus young
  • Record time to walk down hall to next phase of
    the experiment.

25
Stereotyping
  • Chen Bargh (1997)
  • Prime photos
  • Pair w/partner (not primed)
  • Word guessing game (Audio)
  • Primed participant
  • More hostile
  • Partner
  • Rated more hostile

26
Effects of stereotypes
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Individual produces behavior in others to confirm
    their stereotype about person
  • Conscious

27
Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Zanna and Cooper (1974)
  • Experiment 1
  • White interviewer, black applicant
  • Seating
  • Interview end (25) sooner
  • Speech errors (50)

28
Zanna and Cooper (1974)
  • Experiment 2
  • Interviewers (Act like Study 1) White Princeton
    applicants (St. 1)
  • Interviews recorded and rated by participants
  • Black treatment participant Evaluated less
    adequate (Evoking confirming behavior)
  • Interviewees - rated interviewers less adequate
    less friendly.

29
Effects of stereotypes
  • Interpreting behavior
  • White bumps black man, 13 say violent
  • Black bumps white man, 73 say violent
  • Priming
  • React more hostile to experimenter request

30
Can Stereotype activation be inhibited?
  • Goals
  • Multiple categorizations (Macrae et al., 1995)
  • Chinese woman Eating noodles vs. putting on
    make-up
  • 1 Inhibit woman S.
  • 2 Inhibited Chinese

31
Stereotype Threat (Steele et al. 1995) SFP
  • Stereotype threat is the fear of confirming
    others negative stereotypes about ones group.
  • Study 1
  • I.V. Race of participant (B/W)
  • I.V. Salient intelligence test
  • D.V. Verbal test

32
Steele et al. (1995)
33
Stereotype Threat
  • Women and Men (Math)
  • Asians (Math)
  • May lead individuals to Disidentify from areas
    where they are disadvantaged due to stereotypes
    (i.e., math)

34
Stereotype Threat Idea
  • Interview Scenario
  • W/Interviewer, B/Applicant
  • Salient vs. non-salient bias
  • Measure prej

35
Personal Needs and Prejudice
  • Social Identity Theory
  • Scapegoat theory
  • Realistic Group Conflict Theory
  • Need for status and belonging
  • Authoritarian personality

36
Unequal status breeds prejudice
  • Prejudice justifies differences
  • Behavior creates attitudes!
  • Explain this...

37
Is Prejudice inevitable?
  • Lepore and Brown (1997)

38
Inevitability of Prejudice
  • Categories (I.e., age, gender, and race) attended
    to automatically.
  • Influences behavior

39
Automatic activation of stereotypes
  • Category member Node activation spreading
    activation (frequency)

40
Are all characteristics known to be stereotypic
automatically activated?
  • All characteristics may not be automatically
    activated (freq.)

41
Social group representations
  • Individuals beliefs are represented by links

42
Stereotype
  • Diagram (One cognitive structure)

43
Study 1
  • Problem with Devines Studies
  • Replicated Devine Study 1 (content)

44
Study 2
  • Prime for the category Black
  • Read about person and rate on 8 behavioral
    sentences
  • 8 Behavioral Sentences
  • 2 Athletic (Positive)
  • 2 Fun Loving (Positive)
  • 2 Aggressive (Negative)
  • 2 Unreliable (Negative)

45
Results
46
Results
  • High and low-prej respond differentially to primes

47
Study 3
  • Replicated Devine (i.e., poor, slavery, busing,
    negro, oppressed, ghetto)
  • No diff. Between high and low

48
Results
  • Stereotypes may be activated differently for high
    and low prejudice individuals

49
Overcoming Prejudice
  • Judgments of individuals
  • Vivid information may sometimes override
    stereotypes

50
Overcoming Prejudice
  • Sherif (1954)
  • Functionalist
  • Conflict vs. superordinate goals

51
Overcoming Prejudice
  • Summer Camp
  • Stage 1 Friendship formation
  • Stage 2 Rattlers vs. Eagles (group norms,
    status, leaders)
  • Hiking, swimming, building forts separately

52
  • Stage III Initiation of competition
  • tug-of-war, softball, soccer, football, bunkhouse
    inspection, K.P. (reward pocket knives)

53
  • Initially Good sportsmanship
  • formation of negative out-group stereotypes and
    attitudes, raids on opponents camps, and
    physical confrontations between group members
  • at the intragroup level, individual group members
    became more cohesive and orderly

54
Solutions
  • 1 Group contact w/ positive activities
  • More conflict
  • 2 Superordinate Goals
  • Motivation to achieve
  • Cooperation required for success

55
Solutions
  • Tasks Pooling earned cash for movies, pulling
    broken down bus.
  • No immediate effects
  • Over time, significant reduction of conflict
  • Out-group friendship 0 to 30
  • Name calling, derogation, in-group boasting
    decrease

56
Sherif et al. (1961)
  • Two groups at summer camp Rattlers and the
    Eagles
  • Competitive situations
  • Intergroup bias persisted until the functional
    relationship between groups changed.
  • How?

57
Sherif
  • Superordinate goals
  • Broken down bus, movie rentals
  • In future interactions, intergroup biases
    attenuated

58
Modern Racism Scale
  • Strongly Disagree -2 -1 0 1 2 Strongly Agree
  • Over the past few years, the government and news
    media have shown more respect to blacks than they
    deserve.
  • It is easy to understand the anger of Black
    people in America.
  • Discrimination against Blacks in no longer a
    problem in the U.S.
  • Over the past few years Blacks have gotten more,
    economically, than they deserve.
  • Blacks have more influence upon school
    desegregation plans than they ought to have.
  • Blacks are getting too demanding in their push
    for equal rights.
  • Blacks should not put themselves where they are
    not wanted.

59
Stereotype for African Americans
  • Positive attributes-playful, sensitive, humorous,
    charming, fashionable, religious, merry,
    cheerful, athletic, expressive, streetwise,
    musical
  • Negative attributes-ignorant, poor, dishonest,
    complaining, violent, promiscuous, shiftless,
    superstitious, lazy, dangerous, threatening,
    reckless.

60
Stereotype for White Americans
  • Positive-Intelligent, organized, competitive,
    successful, independent, ambitious, progressive,
    industrious, educated, responsible, wealthy,
    ethical
  • Negative-Boastful, exploitative, stubborn,
    materialistic, stuffy, boring, conventional ,
    callous, uptight, greedy, elfish, sheltered

61
Devine, categories for attributes that
individuals listed as a stereotype for African
Americans
  • Poor, aggressive/tough, criminal, low
    intelligence, uneducated, lazy, sexually
    perverse, athletic, rhythmic, ostentatious,
    inferior, food preferences, family
    characteristics, dirty/smelly, descriptive terms

62
EXAM
  • Tuesday, November 31st.
  • 2 Studies w/Black and White participants
  • Address Charlies issue of whether stereotype is
    the same for different sub-cultures.

63
GENDER STEREOTYPES
  • TEXT
  • I will ask about a study...

64
Fazio, Jackson, Dunton, Williams, 1995
  • African-American and White-American
  • 12 pos. words/12 neg. words (good or bad)
  • Do again, exceptprimed with photos before each
    presentation.
  • Latency difference between baseline and score
    when primed with Black or White facedoes face
    speed up or slow down?

65
White Part./Black Part.
66
Results
  • For White Participants
  • Substantial individual differences in automatic
    reaction
  • Do these results have any impact on behavior?

67
Results
  • 10 minute debrief with African American
    experimenter
  • Experimenter (Blind) rated the friendliness and
    interest shown by each participant
  • Positive correlation between this and priming
    study

68
Modern/Aversive Racism Model
  • Overt vs. Subtle
  • Negative feelings towards African Americans
  • a) socialization
  • b) cognitive mechanisms (i.e., categorization)

69
  • Negative feelings / Egalitarian
  • Conscious? No
  • Ex. Of expression of prejudice
  • Helping behavior
  • Alone vs. groupwhite vs. black victim
  • Subtle forms talked about previously

70
Social Identity Theory
  • Desire for () self-concept
  • Group memberships have value (, -)
  • Value determined via S.C.
  • In-group bias
  • Alter reality
  • Favor in-group, derogate out-group

71
S.I.T.
  • Group has low standing?
  • Low S.I. -gt Leave group
  • Increase effort
  • Social Creativity -gt
  • Alter previously negative (Digital Queers
    Triangle WWII)
  • Compare with lower groups
  • Compare on alternative dimensions
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