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Journal Article

Citation

Crandall CS, Bahns AJ, Warner R, Schaller M. Person. Soc. Psychol. Bull. 2011; 37(11): 1488-1498.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0146167211411723

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Three experiments investigate how stereotypes form as justifications for prejudice. The authors created novel content-free prejudices toward unfamiliar social groups using either subliminal (Experiment 1, N = 79) or supraliminal (Experiment 2, N = 105; Experiment 3, N = 130) affective conditioning and measured the consequent endorsement of stereotypes about the groups. Following the stereotype content model, analyses focused on the extent to which stereotypes connoted warmth or competence. Results from all three experiments revealed effects on the warmth dimension but not on the competence dimension: Groups associated with negative affect were stereotyped as comparatively cold (but not comparatively incompetent). These results provide the first evidence that--in the absence of information, interaction, or history of behavioral discrimination--stereotypes develop to justify prejudice.

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