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Journal ArticleDOI

The extended contact effect: Knowledge of cross-group friendships and prejudice.

TLDR
The extended contact hypothesis as mentioned in this paper proposes that knowledge that an in-group member has a close relationship with an outgroup member can lead to more positive intergroup attitudes, and four methodologically diverse studies to demonstrate the phenomenon.
Abstract
The extended contact hypothesis proposes that knowledge that an in-group member has a close relationship with an out-group member can lead to more positive intergroup attitudes. Proposed mechanisms are the in-group or out-group member serving as positive exemplars and the inclusion of the out-group member's group membership in the self. In Studies I and 2, respondents knowing an in-group member with an out-group friend had less negative attitudes toward that out-group, even controlling for disposition.il variables and direct out-group friendships. Study 3, with constructed intergroup-conflict situations (on the robbers cave model). found reduced negative out-group attitudes after participants learned of cross-group friendships. Study 4, a minimal group experiment, showed less negative out-group attitudes for participants observing an apparent in-group-out-group friendship. The intergroup contact hypothesis (Allport, 1954; Williams, 1947) proposes that under a given set of circumstances contact between members of different groups reduces existing negative intergroup attitudes. Some recent research (reviewed below) suggests that the effect may be most clearly associated with the specific contact of a friendship relationship. The extended contact hypothesis, which we introduce here, proposes that knowledge that an in-group member has a close relationship with an out-group member can lead to more positive intergroup attitudes. This article presents the rationale for the extended contact effect, including three mechanisms by which it may operate, and four methodologically diverse studies to demonstrate the phenomenon.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Social Movements as Parsimonious Explanations for Implicit and Explicit Attitude Change

TL;DR: The authors identify six categories of mechanisms through which social movements may transform attitudes: changing society; media representations; intergroup contact and affiliation; empathy, perspective-taking and reduced intergroup anxiety; social recategorization; and social identification and self-efficacy processes.

The relationship between direct and indirect contact and weight bias

TL;DR: Carels et al. as discussed by the authors examined whether and how various forms of intergroup contact can reduce explicit weight bias among normal weight participants (BMI > 18.5 and < 25).

Social Class and Racial Prejudice: A Re-examination of the “Working-Class Authoritarianism” Hypothesis

TL;DR: Moskowitz et al. as discussed by the authors test the relationship between various components of social class and racial prejudice, predicting that prejudice will be positively correlated with social class when operationalized as income or subjective rank, and negatively correlated with socioeconomic status when operationalised as educational attainment.
Book ChapterDOI

Intergroup Contact in Action

Journal ArticleDOI

Mujeres en la universidad española: diferencias de género en el alumnado de Grado

TL;DR: The first female registration at Spanish university takes place in the year 1872 when Maria Elena Maseras Ribera accesses the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Barcelona as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Convergent and discriminant validation by the multitrait-multimethod matrix.

TL;DR: This transmutability of the validation matrix argues for the comparisons within the heteromethod block as the most generally relevant validation data, and illustrates the potential interchangeability of trait and method components.
Book

The psychology of interpersonal relations

TL;DR: The psychology of interpersonal relations as mentioned in this paper, The psychology in interpersonal relations, The Psychology of interpersonal relationships, کتابخانه دیجیتال و فن اطلاعات دانشگاه امام صادق(ع)
Book

The Nature of Prejudice

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the dynamics of prejudgment, including: Frustration, Aggression and Hatred, Anxiety, Sex, and Guilt, Demagogy, and Tolerant Personality.
Book

Handbook of social psychology

TL;DR: In this paper, Neuberg and Heine discuss the notion of belonging, acceptance, belonging, and belonging in the social world, and discuss the relationship between friendship, membership, status, power, and subordination.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rediscovering the social group: A self-categorization theory.

TL;DR: In this paper, a self-categorization theory is proposed to discover the social group and the importance of social categories in the analysis of social influence, and the Salience of social Categories is discussed.
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