A meta-analysis (N 229) was performed to test eects of group membership and identiยฎcation on the use of (sub)categories across ยฎve of our own experiments. In each experiment a name matching paradigm was used to investigate the extent to which (sub)categories were used to organize social information
The effects of group membership and social context on information organization
โ Scribed by Heather Young; Ad Van Knippenberg; Naomi Ellemers; Nanne De Vries
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 181 KB
- Volume
- 27
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0046-2772
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Self-categorization theory posits that the perception of group members is flexible and determined by the comparative social context as well as by group membership. Subjects read about either four ingroup or outgroup target persons in the context of four additional stimulus persons who were members of either the same group as the target persons (intragroup context) or the other group (intergroup context). Individualized and attribute-wise information organization was assessed on the basis of information clustering in free recall. As predicted, differential processing of ingroup information occurred as a function of the salient social context; in an intragroup context, ingroup information was organized significantly more by person than in an intergroup context. Conversely, ingroup information tended to be clustered more by attribute in an intergroup than in an intragroup context. Clustering of outgroup information was not sensitive to changes in the social context. The results indicate that the perception of group members may be based on more than group membership alone. #1997
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