Authors
Jamie Barden, Derek D Rucker, Richard E Petty, Kimberly Rios
Publication date
2014/9
Journal
Group Processes & Intergroup Relations
Volume
17
Issue
5
Pages
590-601
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
Compared to the conventional order of hypocritical actions—saying one thing and then doing another—merely reversing the order of these actions can mitigate whether an individual is judged to be a hypocrite (Barden, Rucker, & Petty, 2005). The present research examines how factors extraneous to a target’s own actions—specifically, group membership—influence hypocrisy judgments. Three experiments provided consistent evidence that reversing the order of statement and behavior mitigated hypocrisy judgments to a greater extent when observers judged ingroup targets compared to outgroup targets. This pattern was observed across two distinct groups (i.e., gender and political party). In addition, mediational evidence suggested that the greater mitigation for ingroup targets stemmed from the observer’s greater tendency to make attributions that ingroup targets had genuinely changed for the better.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Barden, DD Rucker, RE Petty, K Rios - Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, 2014