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Prejudice
a hostile or negative attitude toward people in a distinguishable group based solely on their membership in that group; it contains cognitive (stereotype), emotional, and behavioral components
Attitudes are made up of
1. cognitive component
2. affective component
3. behavioral component
cognitive component
stereotypes
involving the beliefs or thoughts that make up the attitude, schema
affective component
emotions
representing both the type of emotion linked with the attitude and the intensity of the emotion
-logical arguments are not effective in countering emotions
-if you are emotionally invested in a stereotype you're less likely to be open about information that disputes it
behavioral component
relating to one's actions
-discrimination
stereotype
a generalization about a group of people in which identical characteristics are assigned to virtually all members of the group, regardless of actual variation among the members
-cognitive component
schema
a mental structure that organizes one's knowledge about the world
discrimination
unjustified negative or harmful action toward a member of a group solely because of his or her membership in that group
-prejudice leads to this
-racial discrimination, gender discrimination
-behavioral component
The Hannah Study
Darley & Gross
Is testing stereotyoes
Will test a form for evaluating student fit for "special programs"
- Ps see a video of 4th grade girl & get 'fact sheets' about her
Hannah depicted as:
-Low SES, Urban (negative expectancy)
-High SES, Suburban (positive expectancy)
IV: See video (or not) of Hannah being tested
DVs: Area scores, Overall performance, Work habits, Motivation, Emotional maturity, Sociability, Cognitive skill
Outcome:
In the no performance (no video) people all believe that she is about a 4th grader in both the negative and positive expectancy
In the performance group (video) people split: - Negative expectancy (poor), slightly lower - Positive expectancy (wealthy), higher (advanced program)
Also if they thought that Hannah was wealthy they thought that she was taking a harder exam
expectancy confirmation
expectations from stereotypes are not necessarily valid in and of themselves; people will tend to seek out confirmatory evidence
two forms of sexism
1. hostile sexism
2. benevolent sexism
hostile sexism
Hold negative stereotypes of women: women are inferior to men because they are inherently less intelligent, less competent, etc.
benevolent sexism
Holds positive stereotypes of women: women are kinder than men, more empathic, more nurturing, etc.
Hidden prejudices
1. some suppress their true feelings out of sincere motivation to become less prejudiced
2. some suppress their true feelings to avoid being labeled as racist, sexist, or homophobic
3. some people hold implicit prejudices they may not even be aware of
bogus pipeline
-deceiving participants by telling them that any lies they tell will be detected
-fake lie detector
symbolic racism
-a coherent belief system that can be expressed in several beliefs: that Blacks no longer face much prejudice or discrimination, that Blacks' failure to progress results from their unwillingness to work hard enough, that they make excessive demands, and that they have gotten more than they deserve.
-It is based on the belief that blacks violate key American values, particularly the idea of individualism, the belief in working hard to get ahead in life.
Implicit Association Test
A technique for revealing non-conscious prejudices toward particular groups.
Symbolic Racism Scale 2000
-Henry & Sears, 2002
-a scale in order to measure racial resentment
Self-fulfilling prophecy experiment
Word, Zanna, & Cooper
-behavioral component: discrimination
-is testing self-fulfilling prophecy
First experiment:
interviewer sits far away and shows discomfort with the African American applicant while they sit closer and have longer interviews with a white applicant
Independent judges then rate the black applicants more poorly than white applicants
Second experiment:
interviewer sits far away and shows discomfort to a white applicant while they sit closer and have longer interviews with another white applicant
Independent judges then rate the white applicant as more poorly when they received the style previously used for blacks
Self-fulfilling prophecy
an expectation of one's own or another person's behavior that comes true because of the tendency of the person holding it to act in ways that bring it about
stereotype threat
-the apprehension experienced by members of a group that their behavior might confirm a cultural stereotype
-the burden of apprehension interferes with their ability to perform well and applies to both race and gender
institutional discrimination
practices that discriminate, legally or illegally, against a minority group by virtue of its ethnicity, gender, culture, age, sexual orientation, or other target of societal or company prejudice
normative conformity
The tendency to go along with the group in order to fulfill the group's expectations and gain acceptance
social identity
the part of a person's self-concept that is based on his or her identification with a nation, religious or political group, occupation, or other social affiliation
ethnocentrism
the belief that your own culture, nation, or religion is superior to all others
in-group bias
the positive feelings and special treatment we give to people we have defined as being part of our group
Tajfel's minimal group paradigm
-Meaningless assignation
◊ Over estimator vs. under estimator
-Don't meet group members
-No explicit competition
◊ Make you do a competition that you don't even compete against another group
-By random draw you are the person that decides how much money each participant will get
◊ Will still give more money to their own group, even though they have never met them before
out-group homogeneity
the perception that individuals in this group are more similar to each other (homogenous) than they really are, as well as more similar than members of the in-group are
blaming the victim
the tendency to blame individuals (make dispositional attributions) for their victimization, typically motivated by a desire to see the world as a fair place
-Just world theory
-defensive attribution
defensive attribution
-tendency to blame victims for their own misfortunes
realistic conflict theory
the idea that limited resources lead to conflict between groups and result in increased prejudice and discrimination
Realistic conflict theory experiment
Sherif et al. (1961)
-Robbers Cave study
-They got some kids (white) to go to a summer camp
-Broke people up into 2 groups (randomly) into 2 cabins
-Spent the first part of the camp being together with their cabin
-After building the groups cohesiveness the camper told them to have a competition with the other group with a prize
-The reward was one that only one could get and the other couldn't
-They're all kind of the same types of kid but it doesn't take time to hate each other's cabin
-There's negative beliefs, behaviors, it's prejudice that they created in only a couple of weeks
-They tried to fix this by:
Contact hypothesis
Got the kids to fix something together
The counselors treated both sides the same
contact hypothesis
the theory that direct contact between hostile groups will reduce prejudice under certain conditions
Contact hypothesis requirements
-Sides must depend on each other to accomplish goals
-Sides must have a common goal
-Equal Status
-Get to know others in friendly, informal setting
-Exposed to >1 member of other group
-Social norms must promote & support equality