Authors
Shelley E Taylor, Susan T Fiske, Nancy L Etcoff, Audrey J Ruderman
Publication date
1978/7
Journal
Journal of personality and social psychology
Volume
36
Issue
7
Pages
778
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
In 3 studies, a total of 207 White university summer school students observed slide and type portrayals of interacting small groups that were of mixed sex or mixed race. Hypotheses were that (a) social perceivers encode person information by race and sex;(b) this fact leads to minimizing within-group and exaggerating between-group differences;(c) perceivers stereotype accordingly;(d) within-group attributes, both stereotyped and nonstereotyped, are exaggerated in inverse proportion to the size of the minority subgroup;(e) better discriminations are made within smaller subgroups;(f) imputations of attributes to groups as a whole are also sensitive to the makeup of the group; and (g) all these behaviors are attenuated when the perceiver is a member of the subgroup evaluated. All but the last hypothesis received at least partial support. Results are discussed in terms of categorization processes and suggest that …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SE Taylor, ST Fiske, NL Etcoff, AJ Ruderman - Journal of personality and social psychology, 1978