Liking Low-Status? Contextual and Individual Differences in Attributional Biases of Low-Status Outgroup Members

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2019

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Psychopen

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Organizational Unit
Department of Psychology
(2004)
The Atılım University Department of Psychology was founded in the year 2004, and is the first Department of Psychology at the Foundation Schools of Ankara. Our undergraduate program is accredited by FEDEK (The Association for Evaluation and Accreditation of University Programs in Mathematical, Natural and Social Sciences) until 2026. The aim of the department is to raise individuals who are experienced in psychological research and practices and equipped with professional ethics and theoretical knowledge. Our department allows our students to take courses in line with their interests and career goals with our wide range of elective courses on the sub-fields of psychology.

Journal Issue

Abstract

Previous studies on biased intergroup perceptions of outgroups' irrationality mostly treated the target groups as opponents and rivals. In three studies, we extended this line of research and tested the hypothesis that individuals who challenge the existing social hierarchy exhibit more positive biases toward low-status outgroup members. We also hypothesized that when irrational thinking is framed as an important human trait, this bias is reduced among low social dominance orientation (SDO) individuals. In three studies (N = 169, N = 450, and N = 161), conducted in countries that vary in power distance levels (Poland, Spain, Sweden and Turkey), we examined under which conditions low-status outgroups are perceived as more rational than ingroup members. The results show that in a condition without irrationality framed as a human trait, psychology students (Study 1 and Study 2) and nonstudents low in group-based dominance orientation (Study 3) perceive outgroup members as less irrational than ingroup members. However, when participants were reminded that irrationality is a human trait, the perceived differences between in- and outgroup members were reduced. This effect was observed in all four countries (Study 1 and Study 2) and held when variables related to the tendency to behave in a socially desirable way were controlled for (Study 3).

Description

Kosakowska-Berezecka, Natasza/0000-0003-3503-3921; Kosakowska-Berezecka, Natasza/0000-0003-3503-3921; VAZQUEZ, ALEXANDRA/0000-0002-6040-9102; Besta, Tomasz/0000-0001-6209-3677

Keywords

social perception, hierarchy, irrationality, groups, intergroup relations

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Citation

0

WoS Q

Scopus Q

Source

Volume

7

Issue

1

Start Page

192

End Page

212

Collections