Litcius/Paper detail

Minimal but not meaningless: Seemingly arbitrary category labels can imply more than group membership.

Youngki Hong, Kyle G. Ratner

2020Journal of Personality and Social Psychology28 citationsDOI

Abstract

minimal group paradigms to assess how category labels influence minimal group responses. In Study 1, we show that participants represented ingroup faces more favorably than outgroup faces, but also represented overestimator and underestimator category labels differently. In fact, the category label effect was larger than the intergroup effect, even though participants were told that estimation tendencies were unrelated to other cognitive tendencies or personality traits. In Study 2, we demonstrate that Klee and Kandinsky were also represented differently, but in this case, the intergroup effect was stronger than the category label effect. In Studies 3 and 4, we examined effects of category labels on how participants allocate resources to, evaluate, and ascribe traits to ingroup and outgroup members. We found both category label and intergroup effects when participants were assigned to overestimator and underestimator groups. However, we found only the intergroup effect when participants were assigned to Klee and Kandinsky groups. Together, this work advances but does not upend understanding of minimal group effects. We robustly replicate minimal intergroup bias in mental representations of faces, evaluations, trait inferences, and resource allocations. At the same time, we show that seemingly arbitrary category labels can imply characteristics about groups that may influence responses in intergroup contexts. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyGroup (periodic table)Social psychologyCognitive psychologyOrganic chemistryChemistryFace Recognition and PerceptionSocial and Intergroup PsychologyEvolutionary Psychology and Human Behavior
Minimal but not meaningless: Seemingly arbitrary category labels can imply more than group membership. | Litcius