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Scott A. Reid

Researcher at University of California, Santa Barbara

Publications -  40
Citations -  2315

Scott A. Reid is an academic researcher from University of California, Santa Barbara. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social identity theory & Ingroups and outgroups. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 40 publications receiving 2091 citations. Previous affiliations of Scott A. Reid include University of Queensland & Victoria University of Wellington.

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Social Identity, Self-Categorization, and the Communication of Group Norms

TL;DR: The role of norms within the social identity perspective as a basis for theorizing a number of manifestly communicative phenomena has been discussed in this paper, where group norms are cognitively represented as context-dependent prototypes that capture the distinctive properties of groups.
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Uncertainty Reduction, Self-Enhancement, and Ingroup Identification

TL;DR: Two experiments tested the prediction that uncertainty reduction and self-enhancement motivations have an interactive effect on ingroup identification and found low prototypicality depressed identification with a low-status group under high uncertainty.
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Endorsement of distributively fair and unfair leaders in interpersonal and intergroup situations.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured differences in the strength of endorsement for distributively fair and unfair leaders in interpersonal and intergroup situations and found that fairness ratings followed patterns similar to leadership endorsements in Experiments 2 and 3.
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A Self‐Categorization Explanation for the Third‐Person Effect

TL;DR: This article found that the third-person effect for the same media and target other shifts with the frame of reference in which the judgment is made, consistent with self-categorization theory and difficult to reconcile with other explanations.
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A Self-Categorization Explanation for the Hostile Media Effect

TL;DR: The hostile media effect is a phenomenon in which partisans on both sides of an issue perceive neutral media reports to be biased against their side as discussed by the authors, and the effect is amplified by partisanship.