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Wikipedia

Stereotype

In social psychology, a stereotype is a generalized belief about a particular category of people.[2] It is an expectation that people might have about every person of a particular group. The type of expectation can vary; it can be, for example, an expectation about the group's personality, preferences, appearance or ability. Stereotypes are often overgeneralized, inaccurate, and resistant to new information.[3] A stereotype does not necessarily need to be a negative assumption. They may be positive, neutral, or negative.

An 18th-century Dutch engraving of the peoples of the world
A stereotypical caricature of a villain (i.e. generic melodramatic villain stock character, with handlebar moustache and black top-hat), particularly popular in early 20th century silent films and melodramas and popularized by Snidely Whiplash
Police officers buying doughnuts and coffee, an example of perceived stereotypical behavior[1] in North America

Explicit stereotypes edit

An explicit stereotype refers to stereotypes that one is aware that one holds, and is aware that one is using to judge people. If person A is making judgments about a particular person B from a group G, and person A has an explicit stereotype for group G, their decision bias can be partially mitigated using conscious control; however, attempts to offset bias due to conscious awareness of a stereotype often fail at being truly impartial, due to either underestimating or overestimating the amount of bias being created by the stereotype.

Implicit stereotypes edit

Implicit stereotypes are those that lay on individuals' subconsciousness, that they have no control or awareness of.[4] "Implicit stereotypes are built based on two concepts, associative networks in semantic (knowledge) memory and automatic activation".[5] Implicit stereotypes are automatic and involuntary associations that people make between a social group and a domain or attribute. For example, one can have beliefs that women and men are equally capable of becoming successful electricians but at the same time many can associate electricians more with men than women.[5]

In social psychology, a stereotype is any thought widely adopted about specific types of individuals or certain ways of behaving intended to represent the entire group of those individuals or behaviors as a whole.[6] These thoughts or beliefs may or may not accurately reflect reality.[7][8] Within psychology and across other disciplines, different conceptualizations and theories of stereotyping exist, at times sharing commonalities, as well as containing contradictory elements. Even in the social sciences and some sub-disciplines of psychology, stereotypes are occasionally reproduced and can be identified in certain theories, for example, in assumptions about other cultures.[9]

Etymology edit

The term stereotype comes from the French adjective stéréotype and derives from the Greek words στερεός (stereos), 'firm, solid'[10] and τύπος (typos), 'impression',[11] hence 'solid impression on one or more ideas/theories'.

The term was first used in the printing trade in 1798 by Firmin Didot, to describe a printing plate that duplicated any typography. The duplicate printing plate, or the stereotype, is used for printing instead of the original.

Outside of printing, the first reference to stereotype in English was in 1850, as a noun that meant 'image perpetuated without change'.[12] However, it was not until 1922 that stereotype was first used in the modern psychological sense by American journalist Walter Lippmann in his work Public Opinion.[13]

Relationship with other types of intergroup attitudes edit

Stereotypes, prejudice, racism, and discrimination[14] are understood as related but different concepts.[15][16][17][18] Stereotypes are regarded as the most cognitive component and often occurs without conscious awareness, whereas prejudice is the affective component of stereotyping and discrimination is one of the behavioral components of prejudicial reactions.[15][16][19] In this tripartite view of intergroup attitudes, stereotypes reflect expectations and beliefs about the members of groups perceived as different from one's own, prejudice represents the emotional response, and discrimination refers to actions.[15][16]

Although related, the three concepts can exist independently of each other.[16][20] According to Daniel Katz and Kenneth Braly, stereotyping leads to racial prejudice when people emotionally react to the name of a group, ascribe characteristics to members of that group, and then evaluate those characteristics.[17]

Possible prejudicial effects of stereotypes[8] are:

  • Justification of ill-founded prejudices or ignorance
  • Unwillingness to rethink one's attitudes and behavior
  • Preventing some people of stereotyped groups from entering or succeeding in activities or fields[21]

Content edit

 
Stereotype content model, adapted from Fiske et al. (2002): Four types of stereotypes resulting from combinations of perceived warmth and competence.

Stereotype content refers to the attributes that people think characterize a group. Studies of stereotype content examine what people think of others, rather than the reasons and mechanisms involved in stereotyping.[22]

Early theories of stereotype content proposed by social psychologists such as Gordon Allport assumed that stereotypes of outgroups reflected uniform antipathy.[23][24] For instance, Katz and Braly argued in their classic 1933 study that ethnic stereotypes were uniformly negative.[22]

By contrast, a newer model of stereotype content theorizes that stereotypes are frequently ambivalent and vary along two dimensions: warmth and competence. Warmth and competence are respectively predicted by lack of competition and status. Groups that do not compete with the in-group for the same resources (e.g., college space) are perceived as warm, whereas high-status (e.g., economically or educationally successful) groups are considered competent. The groups within each of the four combinations of high and low levels of warmth and competence elicit distinct emotions.[25] The model explains the phenomenon that some out-groups are admired but disliked, whereas others are liked but disrespected. This model was empirically tested on a variety of national and international samples and was found to reliably predict stereotype content.[23][26]

An even more recent model of stereotype content called the agency–beliefs–communion (ABC) model suggested that methods to study warmth and competence in the stereotype content model (SCM) were missing a crucial element, that being, stereotypes of social groups are often spontaneously generated.[27] Experiments on the SCM usually ask participants to rate traits according to warmth and competence but this doesn't allow participants to use any other stereotype dimensions.[28] The ABC model, proposed by Koch and colleagues in 2016 is an estimate of how people spontaneously stereotype U.S social groups of people using traits. Koch et al. conducted several studies asking participants to list groups and sort them according to their similarity.[27] Using statistical techniques, they revealed three dimensions that explained the similarity ratings. These three dimensions were agency (A), beliefs (B), and communion (C). Agency is associated with reaching goals, standing out and socio-economic status and is related to competence in the SCM, with some examples of traits including poor and wealthy, powerful and powerless, low status and high status. Beliefs is associated with views on the world, morals and conservative-progressive beliefs with some examples of traits including traditional and modern, religious and science-oriented or conventional and alternative. Finally, communion is associated with connecting with others and fitting in and is similar to warmth from the SCM, with some examples of traits including trustworthy and untrustworthy, cold and warm and repellent and likeable.[29] According to research using this model, there is a curvilinear relationship between agency and communion.[30] For example, if a group is high or low in the agency dimension then they may be seen as un-communal, whereas groups that are average in agency are seen as more communal.[31] This model has many implications in predicting behaviour towards stereotyped groups. For example, Koch and colleagues recently proposed that perceived similarity in agency and beliefs increases inter-group cooperation.[32]

Functions edit

Early studies suggested that stereotypes were only used by rigid, repressed, and authoritarian people. This idea has been refuted by contemporary studies that suggest the ubiquity of stereotypes and it was suggested to regard stereotypes as collective group beliefs, meaning that people who belong to the same social group share the same set of stereotypes.[20] Modern research asserts that full understanding of stereotypes requires considering them from two complementary perspectives: as shared within a particular culture/subculture and as formed in the mind of an individual person.[33]

Relationship between cognitive and social functions edit

Stereotyping can serve cognitive functions on an interpersonal level, and social functions on an intergroup level.[8][20] For stereotyping to function on an intergroup level (see social identity approaches: social identity theory and self-categorization theory), an individual must see themselves as part of a group and being part of that group must also be salient for the individual.[20]

Craig McGarty, Russell Spears, and Vincent Y. Yzerbyt (2002) argued that the cognitive functions of stereotyping are best understood in relation to its social functions, and vice versa.[34]

Cognitive functions edit

Stereotypes can help make sense of the world. They are a form of categorization that helps to simplify and systematize information. Thus, information is more easily identified, recalled, predicted, and reacted to.[20] Stereotypes are categories of objects or people. Between stereotypes, objects or people are as different from each other as possible.[6] Within stereotypes, objects or people are as similar to each other as possible.[6]

Gordon Allport has suggested possible answers to why people find it easier to understand categorized information.[35] First, people can consult a category to identify response patterns. Second, categorized information is more specific than non-categorized information, as categorization accentuates properties that are shared by all members of a group. Third, people can readily describe objects in a category because objects in the same category have distinct characteristics. Finally, people can take for granted the characteristics of a particular category because the category itself may be an arbitrary grouping.

A complementary perspective theorizes how stereotypes function as time- and energy-savers that allow people to act more efficiently.[6] Yet another perspective suggests that stereotypes are people's biased perceptions of their social contexts.[6] In this view, people use stereotypes as shortcuts to make sense of their social contexts, and this makes a person's task of understanding his or her world less cognitively demanding.[6]

Social functions edit

Social categorization edit

In the following situations, the overarching purpose of stereotyping is for people to put their collective self (their in-group membership) in a positive light:[36]

  • when stereotypes are used for explaining social events
  • when stereotypes are used for justifying activities of one's own group (ingroup) to another group (outgroup)
  • when stereotypes are used for differentiating the ingroup as positively distinct from outgroups
Explanation purposes edit
 
An antisemitic 1873 caricature depicting the stereotypical physical features of a Jewish male

As mentioned previously, stereotypes can be used to explain social events.[20][36] Henri Tajfel[20] described his observations of how some people found that the antisemitic fabricated contents of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion only made sense if Jews have certain characteristics. Therefore, according to Tajfel,[20] Jews were stereotyped as being evil and yearning for world domination to match the antisemitic "facts" as presented in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

Justification purposes edit

People create stereotypes of an outgroup to justify the actions that their in-group has committed (or plans to commit) towards that outgroup.[20][35][36] For example, according to Tajfel,[20] Europeans stereotyped African, Indian, and Chinese people as being incapable of achieving financial advances without European help. This stereotype was used to justify European colonialism in Africa, India, and China.

Intergroup differentiation edit

An assumption is that people want their ingroup to have a positive image relative to outgroups, and so people want to differentiate their ingroup from relevant outgroups in a desirable way.[20] If an outgroup does not affect the ingroup's image, then from an image preservation point of view, there is no point for the ingroup to be positively distinct from that outgroup.[20]

People can actively create certain images for relevant outgroups by stereotyping. People do so when they see that their ingroup is no longer as clearly and/or as positively differentiated from relevant outgroups, and they want to restore the intergroup differentiation to a state that favours the ingroup.[20][36]

Self-categorization edit

Stereotypes can emphasize a person's group membership in two steps: Stereotypes emphasize the person's similarities with ingroup members on relevant dimensions, and also the person's differences from outgroup members on relevant dimensions.[24] People change the stereotype of their ingroups and outgroups to suit context.[24] Once an outgroup treats an ingroup member badly, they are more drawn to the members of their own group.[37] This can be seen as members within a group are able to relate to each other though a stereotype because of identical situations. A person can embrace a stereotype to avoid humiliation such as failing a task and blaming it on a stereotype.[38]

Social influence and consensus edit

Stereotypes are an indicator of ingroup consensus.[36] When there are intragroup disagreements over stereotypes of the ingroup and/or outgroups, ingroup members take collective action to prevent other ingroup members from diverging from each other.[36]

John C. Turner proposed in 1987[36] that if ingroup members disagree on an outgroup stereotype, then one of three possible collective actions follow: First, ingroup members may negotiate with each other and conclude that they have different outgroup stereotypes because they are stereotyping different subgroups of an outgroup (e.g., Russian gymnasts versus Russian boxers). Second, ingroup members may negotiate with each other, but conclude that they are disagreeing because of categorical differences amongst themselves. Accordingly, in this context, it is better to categorise ingroup members under different categories (e.g., Democrats versus Republican) than under a shared category (e.g., American). Finally, ingroup members may influence each other to arrive at a common outgroup stereotype.

Formation edit

Different disciplines give different accounts of how stereotypes develop: Psychologists may focus on an individual's experience with groups, patterns of communication about those groups, and intergroup conflict. As for sociologists, they may focus on the relations among different groups in a social structure. They suggest that stereotypes are the result of conflict, poor parenting, and inadequate mental and emotional development. Once stereotypes have formed, there are two main factors that explain their persistence. First, the cognitive effects of schematic processing (see schema) make it so that when a member of a group behaves as we expect, the behavior confirms and even strengthens existing stereotypes. Second, the affective or emotional aspects of prejudice render logical arguments against stereotypes ineffective in countering the power of emotional responses.[39]

Correspondence bias edit

Correspondence bias refers to the tendency to ascribe a person's behavior to disposition or personality, and to underestimate the extent to which situational factors elicited the behavior. Correspondence bias can play an important role in stereotype formation.[40]

For example, in a study by Roguer and Yzerbyt (1999) participants watched a video showing students who were randomly instructed to find arguments either for or against euthanasia. The students that argued in favor of euthanasia came from the same law department or from different departments. Results showed that participants attributed the students' responses to their attitudes although it had been made clear in the video that students had no choice about their position. Participants reported that group membership, i.e., the department that the students belonged to, affected the students' opinions about euthanasia. Law students were perceived to be more in favor of euthanasia than students from different departments despite the fact that a pretest had revealed that subjects had no preexisting expectations about attitudes toward euthanasia and the department that students belong to. The attribution error created the new stereotype that law students are more likely to support euthanasia.[41]

Nier et al. (2012) found that people who tend to draw dispositional inferences from behavior and ignore situational constraints are more likely to stereotype low-status groups as incompetent and high-status groups as competent. Participants listened to descriptions of two fictitious groups of Pacific Islanders, one of which was described as being higher in status than the other. In a second study, subjects rated actual groups – the poor and wealthy, women and men – in the United States in terms of their competence. Subjects who scored high on the measure of correspondence bias stereotyped the poor, women, and the fictitious lower-status Pacific Islanders as incompetent whereas they stereotyped the wealthy, men, and the high-status Pacific Islanders as competent. The correspondence bias was a significant predictor of stereotyping even after controlling for other measures that have been linked to beliefs about low status groups, the just-world hypothesis and social dominance orientation.[42]

Based on the anti-public sector bias,[43] Döring and Willems (2021)[44] found that employees in the public sector are considered as less professional compared to employees in the private sector. They build on the assumption that the red-tape and bureaucratic nature of the public sector spills over in the perception that citizens have about the employees working in the sector. With an experimental vignette study, they analyze how citizens process information on employees' sector affiliation, and integrate non-work role-referencing to test the stereotype confirmation assumption underlying the representativeness heuristic. The results show that sector as well as non-work role-referencing influences perceived employee professionalism but has little effect on the confirmation of particular public sector stereotypes.[45] Moreover, the results do not confirm a congruity effect of consistent stereotypical information: non-work role-referencing does not aggravate the negative effect of sector affiliation on perceived employee professionalism.

Illusory correlation edit

Research has shown that stereotypes can develop based on a cognitive mechanism known as illusory correlation – an erroneous inference about the relationship between two events.[6][46][47] If two statistically infrequent events co-occur, observers overestimate the frequency of co-occurrence of these events. The underlying reason is that rare, infrequent events are distinctive and salient and, when paired, become even more so. The heightened salience results in more attention and more effective encoding, which strengthens the belief that the events are correlated.[48][49][50]

In the inter-group context, illusory correlations lead people to misattribute rare behaviors or traits at higher rates to minority group members than to majority groups, even when both display the same proportion of the behaviors or traits. Black people, for instance, are a minority group in the United States and interaction with blacks is a relatively infrequent event for an average white American.[51] Similarly, undesirable behavior (e.g. crime) is statistically less frequent than desirable behavior. Since both events "blackness" and "undesirable behavior" are distinctive in the sense that they are infrequent, the combination of the two leads observers to overestimate the rate of co-occurrence.[48] Similarly, in workplaces where women are underrepresented and negative behaviors such as errors occur less frequently than positive behaviors, women become more strongly associated with mistakes than men.[52]

In a landmark study, David Hamilton and Richard Gifford (1976) examined the role of illusory correlation in stereotype formation. Subjects were instructed to read descriptions of behaviors performed by members of groups A and B. Negative behaviors outnumbered positive actions and group B was smaller than group A, making negative behaviors and membership in group B relatively infrequent and distinctive. Participants were then asked who had performed a set of actions: a person of group A or group B. Results showed that subjects overestimated the frequency with which both distinctive events, membership in group B and negative behavior, co-occurred, and evaluated group B more negatively. This despite the fact the proportion of positive to negative behaviors was equivalent for both groups and that there was no actual correlation between group membership and behaviors.[48] Although Hamilton and Gifford found a similar effect for positive behaviors as the infrequent events, a meta-analytic review of studies showed that illusory correlation effects are stronger when the infrequent, distinctive information is negative.[46]

Hamilton and Gifford's distinctiveness-based explanation of stereotype formation was subsequently extended.[49] A 1994 study by McConnell, Sherman, and Hamilton found that people formed stereotypes based on information that was not distinctive at the time of presentation, but was considered distinctive at the time of judgement.[53] Once a person judges non-distinctive information in memory to be distinctive, that information is re-encoded and re-represented as if it had been distinctive when it was first processed.[53]

Common environment edit

One explanation for why stereotypes are shared is that they are the result of a common environment that stimulates people to react in the same way.[6]

The problem with the 'common environment' is that explanation in general is that it does not explain how shared stereotypes can occur without direct stimuli.[6] Research since the 1930s suggested that people are highly similar with each other in how they describe different racial and national groups, although those people have no personal experience with the groups they are describing.[54]

Socialization and upbringing edit

Another explanation says that people are socialised to adopt the same stereotypes.[6] Some psychologists believe that although stereotypes can be absorbed at any age, stereotypes are usually acquired in early childhood under the influence of parents, teachers, peers, and the media.

If stereotypes are defined by social values, then stereotypes only change as per changes in social values.[6] The suggestion that stereotype content depends on social values reflects Walter Lippman's argument in his 1922 publication that stereotypes are rigid because they cannot be changed at will.[17]

Studies emerging since the 1940s refuted the suggestion that stereotype contents cannot be changed at will. Those studies suggested that one group's stereotype of another group would become more or less positive depending on whether their intergroup relationship had improved or degraded.[17][55][56] Intergroup events (e.g., World War II, Persian Gulf conflicts) often changed intergroup relationships. For example, after WWII, Black American students held a more negative stereotype of people from countries that were the United States's WWII enemies.[17] If there are no changes to an intergroup relationship, then relevant stereotypes do not change.[18]

Intergroup relations edit

According to a third explanation, shared stereotypes are neither caused by the coincidence of common stimuli, nor by socialisation. This explanation posits that stereotypes are shared because group members are motivated to behave in certain ways, and stereotypes reflect those behaviours.[6] It is important to note from this explanation that stereotypes are the consequence, not the cause, of intergroup relations. This explanation assumes that when it is important for people to acknowledge both their ingroup and outgroup, they will emphasise their difference from outgroup members, and their similarity to ingroup members.[6] International migration creates more opportunities for intergroup relations, but the interactions do not always disconfirm stereotypes. They are also known to form and maintain them.[57]

Activation edit

The dual-process model of cognitive processing of stereotypes asserts that automatic activation of stereotypes is followed by a controlled processing stage, during which an individual may choose to disregard or ignore the stereotyped information that has been brought to mind.[19]

A number of studies have found that stereotypes are activated automatically. Patricia Devine (1989), for example, suggested that stereotypes are automatically activated in the presence of a member (or some symbolic equivalent) of a stereotyped group and that the unintentional activation of the stereotype is equally strong for high- and low-prejudice persons. Words related to the cultural stereotype of blacks were presented subliminally. During an ostensibly unrelated impression-formation task, subjects read a paragraph describing a race-unspecified target person's behaviors and rated the target person on several trait scales. Results showed that participants who received a high proportion of racial words rated the target person in the story as significantly more hostile than participants who were presented with a lower proportion of words related to the stereotype. This effect held true for both high- and low-prejudice subjects (as measured by the Modern Racism Scale). Thus, the racial stereotype was activated even for low-prejudice individuals who did not personally endorse it.[19][58][59] Studies using alternative priming methods have shown that the activation of gender and age stereotypes can also be automatic.[60][61]

Subsequent research suggested that the relation between category activation and stereotype activation was more complex.[59][62] Lepore and Brown (1997), for instance, noted that the words used in Devine's study were both neutral category labels (e.g., "Blacks") and stereotypic attributes (e.g., "lazy"). They argued that if only the neutral category labels were presented, people high and low in prejudice would respond differently. In a design similar to Devine's, Lepore and Brown primed the category of African-Americans using labels such as "blacks" and "West Indians" and then assessed the differential activation of the associated stereotype in the subsequent impression-formation task. They found that high-prejudice participants increased their ratings of the target person on the negative stereotypic dimensions and decreased them on the positive dimension whereas low-prejudice subjects tended in the opposite direction. The results suggest that the level of prejudice and stereotype endorsement affects people's judgements when the category – and not the stereotype per se – is primed.[63]

Research has shown that people can be trained to activate counterstereotypic information and thereby reduce the automatic activation of negative stereotypes. In a study by Kawakami et al. (2000), for example, participants were presented with a category label and taught to respond "No" to stereotypic traits and "Yes" to nonstereotypic traits. After this training period, subjects showed reduced stereotype activation.[64][65] This effect is based on the learning of new and more positive stereotypes rather than the negation of already existing ones.[65]

Automatic behavioral outcomes edit

Empirical evidence suggests that stereotype activation can automatically influence social behavior.[66][67][68][69] For example, Bargh, Chen, and Burrows (1996) activated the stereotype of the elderly among half of their participants by administering a scrambled-sentence test where participants saw words related to age stereotypes. Subjects primed with the stereotype walked significantly more slowly than the control group (although the test did not include any words specifically referring to slowness), thus acting in a way that the stereotype suggests that elderly people will act. And the stereotype of the elder will affect the subjective perception of them through depression.[70] In another experiment, Bargh, Chen, and Burrows also found that because the stereotype about blacks includes the notion of aggression, subliminal exposure to black faces increased the likelihood that randomly selected white college students reacted with more aggression and hostility than participants who subconsciously viewed a white face.[71] Similarly, Correll et al. (2002) showed that activated stereotypes about blacks can influence people's behavior. In a series of experiments, black and white participants played a video game, in which a black or white person was shown holding a gun or a harmless object (e.g., a mobile phone). Participants had to decide as quickly as possible whether to shoot the target. When the target person was armed, both black and white participants were faster in deciding to shoot the target when he was black than when he was white. When the target was unarmed, the participants avoided shooting him more quickly when he was white. Time pressure made the shooter bias even more pronounced.[72]

Accuracy edit

 
A magazine feature from Beauty Parade from March 1952 stereotyping women drivers. It features Bettie Page as the model.

Stereotypes can be efficient shortcuts and sense-making tools. They can, however, keep people from processing new or unexpected information about each individual, thus biasing the impression formation process.[6] Early researchers believed that stereotypes were inaccurate representations of reality.[54] A series of pioneering studies in the 1930s found no empirical support for widely held racial stereotypes.[17] By the mid-1950s, Gordon Allport wrote that, "It is possible for a stereotype to grow in defiance of all evidence."[35]

Research on the role of illusory correlations in the formation of stereotypes suggests that stereotypes can develop because of incorrect inferences about the relationship between two events (e.g., membership in a social group and bad or good attributes). This means that at least some stereotypes are inaccurate.[46][48][50][53]

A 1995 book by Yueh-Ting Lee et al. argued that stereotypes are sometimes accurate.[73] Similarly, a 2015 study by Jussim et al. reviewed four studies of racial stereotypes, and seven studies of gender stereotypes regarding demographic characteristics, academic achievement, personality and behavior, and argued that some aspects of ethnic and gender stereotypes are accurate while stereotypes concerning political affiliation and nationality are much less accurate.[74]

A 2005 study by Terracciano et al. found that stereotypic beliefs about nationality do not reflect the actual personality traits of people from different cultures.[75]

In a 1973 paper, Marlene MacKie argued that while stereotypes are inaccurate, this is a definition rather than empirical claim – stereotypes were simply defined as inaccurate, even though the supposed inaccuracy of stereotypes was treated as though it was an empirical discovery.[76]

Effects edit

Attributional ambiguity edit

Attributive ambiguity refers to the uncertainty that members of stereotyped groups experience in interpreting the causes of others' behavior toward them. Stereotyped individuals who receive negative feedback can attribute it either to personal shortcomings, such as lack of ability or poor effort, or the evaluator's stereotypes and prejudice toward their social group. Alternatively, positive feedback can either be attributed to personal merit or discounted as a form of sympathy or pity.[77][78][79]

Crocker et al. (1991) showed that when black participants were evaluated by a white person who was aware of their race, black subjects mistrusted the feedback, attributing negative feedback to the evaluator's stereotypes and positive feedback to the evaluator's desire to appear unbiased. When the black participants' race was unknown to the evaluator, they were more accepting of the feedback.[80]

Attributional ambiguity has been shown to affect a person's self-esteem. When they receive positive evaluations, stereotyped individuals are uncertain of whether they really deserved their success and, consequently, they find it difficult to take credit for their achievements. In the case of negative feedback, ambiguity has been shown to have a protective effect on self-esteem as it allows people to assign blame to external causes. Some studies, however, have found that this effect only holds when stereotyped individuals can be absolutely certain that their negative outcomes are due to the evaluators's prejudice. If any room for uncertainty remains, stereotyped individuals tend to blame themselves.[78]

Attributional ambiguity can also make it difficult to assess one's skills because performance-related evaluations are mistrusted or discounted. Moreover, it can lead to the belief that one's efforts are not directly linked to the outcomes, thereby depressing one's motivation to succeed.[77]

Stereotype threat edit

 
The effect of stereotype threat (ST) on math test scores for girls and boys. Data from Osborne (2007).[81]

Stereotype threat occurs when people are aware of a negative stereotype about their social group and experience anxiety or concern that they might confirm the stereotype.[82] Stereotype threat has been shown to undermine performance in a variety of domains.[83][84]

Claude M. Steele and Joshua Aronson conducted the first experiments showing that stereotype threat can depress intellectual performance on standardized tests. In one study, they found that black college students performed worse than white students on a verbal test when the task was framed as a measure of intelligence. When it was not presented in that manner, the performance gap narrowed. Subsequent experiments showed that framing the test as diagnostic of intellectual ability made black students more aware of negative stereotypes about their group, which in turn impaired their performance.[85] Stereotype threat effects have been demonstrated for an array of social groups in many different arenas, including not only academics but also sports,[86] chess[87] and business.[88]

Some researchers have suggested that stereotype threat should not be interpreted as a factor in real-life performance gaps, and have raised the possibility of publication bias.[89][90][91] Other critics have focused on correcting what they claim are misconceptions of early studies showing a large effect.[92] However, meta-analyses and systematic reviews have shown significant evidence for the effects of stereotype threat, though the phenomenon defies over-simplistic characterization.[93][94][95][96][97][98][99][100]

Self-fulfilling prophecy edit

Stereotypes lead people to expect certain actions from members of social groups. These stereotype-based expectations may lead to self-fulfilling prophecies, in which one's inaccurate expectations about a person's behavior, through social interaction, prompt that person to act in stereotype-consistent ways, thus confirming one's erroneous expectations and validating the stereotype.[101][102][103]

Word, Zanna, and Cooper (1974) demonstrated the effects of stereotypes in the context of a job interview. White participants interviewed black and white subjects who, prior to the experiments, had been trained to act in a standardized manner. Analysis of the videotaped interviews showed that black job applicants were treated differently: They received shorter amounts of interview time and less eye contact; interviewers made more speech errors (e.g., stutters, sentence incompletions, incoherent sounds) and physically distanced themselves from black applicants. In a second experiment, trained interviewers were instructed to treat applicants, all of whom were white, like the whites or blacks had been treated in the first experiment. As a result, applicants treated like the blacks of the first experiment behaved in a more nervous manner and received more negative performance ratings than interviewees receiving the treatment previously afforded to whites.[104]

A 1977 study by Snyder, Tanke, and Berscheid found a similar pattern in social interactions between men and women. Male undergraduate students were asked to talk to female undergraduates, whom they believed to be physically attractive or unattractive, on the phone. The conversations were taped and analysis showed that men who thought that they were talking to an attractive woman communicated in a more positive and friendlier manner than men who believed that they were talking to unattractive women. This altered the women's behavior: Female subjects who, unknowingly to them, were perceived to be physically attractive behaved in a friendly, likeable, and sociable manner in comparison with subjects who were regarded as unattractive.[105]

A 2005 study by J. Thomas Kellow and Brett D. Jones looked at the effects of self-fulfilling prophecy on African American and Caucasian high school freshman students. Both white and black students were informed that their test performance would be predictive of their performance on a statewide, high stakes standardized test. They were also told that historically, white students had outperformed black students on the test. This knowledge created a self-fulfilling prophecy in both the white and black students, where the white students scored statistically significantly higher than the African American students on the test. The stereotype threat of underperforming on standardized tests affected the African American students in this study.[106]

In accountancy, there is a popular stereotype which represents members of the profession as being humorless, introspective beancounters.[107][108]

Discrimination and prejudice edit

Because stereotypes simplify and justify social reality, they have potentially powerful effects on how people perceive and treat one another.[109] As a result, stereotypes can lead to discrimination in labor markets and other domains.[110] For example, Tilcsik (2011) has found that employers who seek job applicants with stereotypically male heterosexual traits are particularly likely to engage in discrimination against gay men, suggesting that discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is partly rooted in specific stereotypes and that these stereotypes loom large in many labor markets.[21] Agerström and Rooth (2011) showed that automatic obesity stereotypes captured by the Implicit Association Test can predict real hiring discrimination against the obese.[111] Similarly, experiments suggest that gender stereotypes play an important role in judgments that affect hiring decisions.[112][113]

Stereotypes can cause racist prejudice. For example, scientists and activists have warned that the use of the stereotype "Nigerian Prince" for referring to Advance-fee scammers is racist, i.e. "reducing Nigeria to a nation of scammers and fraudulent princes, as some people still do online, is a stereotype that needs to be called out".[114]

Self-stereotyping edit

Stereotypes can affect self-evaluations and lead to self-stereotyping.[8][115] For instance, Correll (2001, 2004) found that specific stereotypes (e.g., the stereotype that women have lower mathematical ability) affect women's and men's evaluations of their abilities (e.g., in math and science), such that men assess their own task ability higher than women performing at the same level.[116][117] Similarly, a study by Sinclair et al. (2006) has shown that Asian American women rated their math ability more favorably when their ethnicity and the relevant stereotype that Asian Americans excel in math was made salient. In contrast, they rated their math ability less favorably when their gender and the corresponding stereotype of women's inferior math skills was made salient. Sinclair et al. found, however, that the effect of stereotypes on self-evaluations is mediated by the degree to which close people in someone's life endorse these stereotypes. People's self-stereotyping can increase or decrease depending on whether close others view them in stereotype-consistent or inconsistent manner.[118]

Stereotyping can also play a central role in depression, when people have negative self-stereotypes about themselves. According to Cox, Abramson, Devine, and Hollon (2012).[8] , stereotyping can also play a central role in depression, which is characterized by negative self-schemas. Stereotypes and self-schemas are the same type of cognitive structure, therefore, they suggest that an integrated perspective of prejudice and depression provides useful insight on how stereotypes are acquired. Negative stereotypes are set in motion within the Source, who conveys the prejudice towards the Target, which in turn will lead the Target to suffer from depression. Members of stigmatized groups may internalize the negative evaluation of their group and develop depression. People may also show prejudice internalization through self-stereotyping because of negative childhood experiences such as verbal and physical abuse. This depression that is caused by prejudice (i.e., "deprejudice") can be related to group membership (e.g., Me–Gay–Bad) or not (e.g., Me–Bad). If someone holds prejudicial beliefs about a stigmatized group and then becomes a member of that group, they may internalize their prejudice and develop depression. People may also show prejudice internalization through self-stereotyping because of negative childhood experiences such as verbal and physical abuse.[119]

Substitute for observations edit

Stereotypes are traditional and familiar symbol clusters, expressing a more or less complex idea in a convenient way. They are often simplistic pronouncements about gender, racial, ethnic, and cultural backgrounds and they can become a source of misinformation and delusion. For example, in a school when students are confronted with the task of writing a theme, they think in terms of literary associations, often using stereotypes picked up from books, films, and magazines that they have read or viewed.

The danger in stereotyping lies not in its existence, but in the fact that it can become a substitute for observation and a misinterpretation of a cultural identity.[120] Promoting information literacy is a pedagogical approach that can effectively combat the entrenchment of stereotypes. The necessity for using information literacy to separate multicultural "fact from fiction" is well illustrated with examples from literature and media.[121]

Role in art and culture edit

 
American political cartoon titled "The Usual Irish Way of Doing Things", depicting a drunken Irishman lighting a powder keg and swinging a bottle. Published in Harper's Weekly, 1871.

Stereotypes are common in various cultural media, where they take the form of dramatic stock characters. The instantly recognizable nature of stereotypes mean that they are effective in advertising and situation comedy.[122] Alexander Fedorov (2015) proposed a concept of media stereotypes analysis. This concept refers to identification and analysis of stereotypical images of people, ideas, events, stories, themes, etc. in media context.[123]

The characters that do appear in movies greatly affect how people worldwide perceive gender relations, race, and cultural communities. Because approximately 85% of worldwide ticket sales are directed toward Hollywood movies, the American movie industry has been greatly responsible for portraying characters of different cultures and diversity to fit into stereotypical categories.[124] This has led to the spread and persistence of gender, racial, ethnic, and cultural stereotypes seen in the movies.[89]

For example, Russians are usually portrayed as ruthless agents, brutal mobsters and villains in Hollywood movies.[125][126][127] According to Russian American professor Nina L. Khrushcheva, "You can't even turn the TV on and go to the movies without reference to Russians as horrible."[128] The portrayals of Latin Americans in film and print media are restricted to a narrow set of characters. Latin Americans are largely depicted as sexualized figures such as the Latino macho or the Latina vixen, gang members, (illegal) immigrants, or entertainers. By comparison, they are rarely portrayed as working professionals, business leaders or politicians.[112]

In Hollywood films, there are several Latin American stereotypes that have historically been used. Some examples are El Bandido, the Halfbreed Harlot, The Male Buffoon, The Female Clown, The Latin Lover, The Dark Lady, The Wise Old Man, and The Poor Peon. Many Hispanic characters in Hollywood films consists of one or more of these basic stereotypes, but it has been rare to view Latin American actors representing characters outside of this stereotypical criteria.[129]

Media stereotypes of women first emerged in the early 20th century. Various stereotypic depictions or "types" of women appeared in magazines, including Victorian ideals of femininity, the New Woman, the Gibson Girl, the Femme fatale, and the Flapper.[88][130]

Stereotypes are also common in video games, with women being portrayed as stereotypes such as the "damsel in distress" or as sexual objects (see Gender representation in video games).[131] Studies show that minorities are portrayed most often in stereotypical roles such as athletes and gangsters[132] (see Race and video games).

In literature and art, stereotypes are clichéd or predictable characters or situations. Throughout history, storytellers have drawn from stereotypical characters and situations to immediately connect the audience with new tales.[133]

Role in sports edit

Female athletes encounter various pressures and stereotypes, which have significant psychological consequences. These stereotypes give rise to challenges in athletes' lives, including diminished self-esteem, leading to more profound psychological impacts.

Female athletes have made considerable strides in overcoming obstacles. They have transitioned from being unable to compete competitively due to biological misconceptions to having equal opportunities as male athletes, thanks to Title IX.[134] Today, there is greater societal acceptance of female athletes. However, the intersection of being a female athlete adds additional pressures. Not only are they expected to excel in competition, but they are also required to conform to societal expectations of femininity. Furthermore, female athletes often face scrutiny and criticism regarding their appearance compared to non-athletic women.

Young athletes, in particular, confront an intensified amount of pressure, leading some to quit sports because it is no longer enjoyable and the implications of being a young female athlete become overwhelming. They are unfairly labeled as gay or delicate and subjected to derogatory comments such as "like a girl." Additionally, they grapple with body image concerns that can give rise to severe health issues. Even specific sports contribute to the scrutiny female athletes face, with criticism directed at the uniforms required for competition.[134]

The proliferation of stereotypes in women's sports has resulted in a decline in female participation. These social stigmas, including being labeled as gay or delicate, and the expectation to play in a manner deemed "like a girl," have contributed to body image issues, eating disorders, and depression among numerous female athletes.

See also edit

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Further reading edit

  • Hilton, James L.; von Hippel, William (1996). "Stereotypes". Annual Review of Psychology. 47 (1): 237–271. doi:10.1146/annurev.psych.47.1.237. PMID 15012482.
  • Ewen, Stuart; Ewen, Elizabeth (2006). Typecasting: On the Arts and Sciences of Human Inequality. New York: Seven Stories Press.
  • Stereotype & Society A Major Resource: Constantly updated and archived
  • Regenberg, Nina (2007). . The Inquisitive Mind (3). Archived from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  • . Beta.In-Mind.org. Archived from the original on 24 July 2010. Retrieved 25 July 2018.
  • Turner, Chris (2004). Planet Simpson: How a Cartoon Masterpiece Documented an Era and Defined a Generation. Foreword by Douglas Coupland. Toronto: Random House Canada. ISBN 9780679313182. OCLC 55682258..
  • Crawford, M.; Unger, R. (2004). Women and Gender: A Feminist Psychology. New York: McGraw Hill. pp. 45–49.
  • Spitzer, B. L.; Henderson, K.; Zavian, M. T. (1999). "Gender differences in population versus media body sizes: A comparison over four decades". Sex Roles. 40 (7/8): 545–565. doi:10.1023/a:1018836029738. S2CID 55674520.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Stereotypes at Wikimedia Commons
  •   The dictionary definition of stereotype at Wiktionary
  • Interview with social psychologists Susan Fiske and Mike North about the stereotyping of older people
  • How gender stereotypes influence emerging career aspirations – lecture by Stanford University sociologist Shelley Correll on 21 October 2010
  • Social Psychology Network Stereotyping
  •  – Media Smarts, Canada's Centre for Digital and Media Literacy
  • Age and Health based stereotyping Age and Health based stereotyping
  • The Danger of a Single Story TEDTalk by Chimamanda Adichie

stereotype, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, stereotypy, social, psychology, stereotype, generalized, belief, about, particular, category, people, expectation, that, people, might, have, about, every, person, particular, group, type, expectation, v. For other uses see Stereotype disambiguation Not to be confused with Stereotypy In social psychology a stereotype is a generalized belief about a particular category of people 2 It is an expectation that people might have about every person of a particular group The type of expectation can vary it can be for example an expectation about the group s personality preferences appearance or ability Stereotypes are often overgeneralized inaccurate and resistant to new information 3 A stereotype does not necessarily need to be a negative assumption They may be positive neutral or negative An 18th century Dutch engraving of the peoples of the worldA stereotypical caricature of a villain i e generic melodramatic villain stock character with handlebar moustache and black top hat particularly popular in early 20th century silent films and melodramas and popularized by Snidely WhiplashPolice officers buying doughnuts and coffee an example of perceived stereotypical behavior 1 in North America Contents 1 Explicit stereotypes 2 Implicit stereotypes 3 Etymology 4 Relationship with other types of intergroup attitudes 5 Content 6 Functions 6 1 Relationship between cognitive and social functions 6 2 Cognitive functions 6 3 Social functions 6 3 1 Social categorization 6 3 1 1 Explanation purposes 6 3 1 2 Justification purposes 6 3 1 3 Intergroup differentiation 6 3 2 Self categorization 6 3 3 Social influence and consensus 7 Formation 7 1 Correspondence bias 7 2 Illusory correlation 7 3 Common environment 7 4 Socialization and upbringing 7 5 Intergroup relations 8 Activation 8 1 Automatic behavioral outcomes 9 Accuracy 10 Effects 10 1 Attributional ambiguity 10 2 Stereotype threat 10 3 Self fulfilling prophecy 10 4 Discrimination and prejudice 10 5 Self stereotyping 10 6 Substitute for observations 11 Role in art and culture 11 1 Role in sports 12 See also 12 1 Examples of stereotypes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksExplicit stereotypes editAn explicit stereotype refers to stereotypes that one is aware that one holds and is aware that one is using to judge people If person Ais making judgments about a particular person B from a group G and person A has an explicit stereotype for group G their decision bias can be partially mitigated using conscious control however attempts to offset bias due to conscious awareness of a stereotype often fail at being truly impartial due to either underestimating or overestimating the amount of bias being created by the stereotype Implicit stereotypes editImplicit stereotypes are those that lay on individuals subconsciousness that they have no control or awareness of 4 Implicit stereotypes are built based on two concepts associative networks in semantic knowledge memory and automatic activation 5 Implicit stereotypes are automatic and involuntary associations that people make between a social group and a domain or attribute For example one can have beliefs that women and men are equally capable of becoming successful electricians but at the same time many can associate electricians more with men than women 5 In social psychology a stereotype is any thought widely adopted about specific types of individuals or certain ways of behaving intended to represent the entire group of those individuals or behaviors as a whole 6 These thoughts or beliefs may or may not accurately reflect reality 7 8 Within psychology and across other disciplines different conceptualizations and theories of stereotyping exist at times sharing commonalities as well as containing contradictory elements Even in the social sciences and some sub disciplines of psychology stereotypes are occasionally reproduced and can be identified in certain theories for example in assumptions about other cultures 9 Etymology editThe term stereotype comes from the French adjective stereotype and derives from the Greek words stereos stereos firm solid 10 and typos typos impression 11 hence solid impression on one or more ideas theories The term was first used in the printing trade in 1798 by Firmin Didot to describe a printing plate that duplicated any typography The duplicate printing plate or the stereotype is used for printing instead of the original Outside of printing the first reference to stereotype in English was in 1850 as a noun that meant image perpetuated without change 12 However it was not until 1922 that stereotype was first used in the modern psychological sense by American journalist Walter Lippmann in his work Public Opinion 13 Relationship with other types of intergroup attitudes editStereotypes prejudice racism and discrimination 14 are understood as related but different concepts 15 16 17 18 Stereotypes are regarded as the most cognitive component and often occurs without conscious awareness whereas prejudice is the affective component of stereotyping and discrimination is one of the behavioral components of prejudicial reactions 15 16 19 In this tripartite view of intergroup attitudes stereotypes reflect expectations and beliefs about the members of groups perceived as different from one s own prejudice represents the emotional response and discrimination refers to actions 15 16 Although related the three concepts can exist independently of each other 16 20 According to Daniel Katz and Kenneth Braly stereotyping leads to racial prejudice when people emotionally react to the name of a group ascribe characteristics to members of that group and then evaluate those characteristics 17 Possible prejudicial effects of stereotypes 8 are Justification of ill founded prejudices or ignorance Unwillingness to rethink one s attitudes and behavior Preventing some people of stereotyped groups from entering or succeeding in activities or fields 21 Content edit nbsp Stereotype content model adapted from Fiske et al 2002 Four types of stereotypes resulting from combinations of perceived warmth and competence Stereotype content refers to the attributes that people think characterize a group Studies of stereotype content examine what people think of others rather than the reasons and mechanisms involved in stereotyping 22 Early theories of stereotype content proposed by social psychologists such as Gordon Allport assumed that stereotypes of outgroups reflected uniform antipathy 23 24 For instance Katz and Braly argued in their classic 1933 study that ethnic stereotypes were uniformly negative 22 By contrast a newer model of stereotype content theorizes that stereotypes are frequently ambivalent and vary along two dimensions warmth and competence Warmth and competence are respectively predicted by lack of competition and status Groups that do not compete with the in group for the same resources e g college space are perceived as warm whereas high status e g economically or educationally successful groups are considered competent The groups within each of the four combinations of high and low levels of warmth and competence elicit distinct emotions 25 The model explains the phenomenon that some out groups are admired but disliked whereas others are liked but disrespected This model was empirically tested on a variety of national and international samples and was found to reliably predict stereotype content 23 26 An even more recent model of stereotype content called the agency beliefs communion ABC model suggested that methods to study warmth and competence in the stereotype content model SCM were missing a crucial element that being stereotypes of social groups are often spontaneously generated 27 Experiments on the SCM usually ask participants to rate traits according to warmth and competence but this doesn t allow participants to use any other stereotype dimensions 28 The ABC model proposed by Koch and colleagues in 2016 is an estimate of how people spontaneously stereotype U S social groups of people using traits Koch et al conducted several studies asking participants to list groups and sort them according to their similarity 27 Using statistical techniques they revealed three dimensions that explained the similarity ratings These three dimensions were agency A beliefs B and communion C Agency is associated with reaching goals standing out and socio economic status and is related to competence in the SCM with some examples of traits including poor and wealthy powerful and powerless low status and high status Beliefs is associated with views on the world morals and conservative progressive beliefs with some examples of traits including traditional and modern religious and science oriented or conventional and alternative Finally communion is associated with connecting with others and fitting in and is similar to warmth from the SCM with some examples of traits including trustworthy and untrustworthy cold and warm and repellent and likeable 29 According to research using this model there is a curvilinear relationship between agency and communion 30 For example if a group is high or low in the agency dimension then they may be seen as un communal whereas groups that are average in agency are seen as more communal 31 This model has many implications in predicting behaviour towards stereotyped groups For example Koch and colleagues recently proposed that perceived similarity in agency and beliefs increases inter group cooperation 32 Functions editEarly studies suggested that stereotypes were only used by rigid repressed and authoritarian people This idea has been refuted by contemporary studies that suggest the ubiquity of stereotypes and it was suggested to regard stereotypes as collective group beliefs meaning that people who belong to the same social group share the same set of stereotypes 20 Modern research asserts that full understanding of stereotypes requires considering them from two complementary perspectives as shared within a particular culture subculture and as formed in the mind of an individual person 33 Relationship between cognitive and social functions edit Stereotyping can serve cognitive functions on an interpersonal level and social functions on an intergroup level 8 20 For stereotyping to function on an intergroup level see social identity approaches social identity theory and self categorization theory an individual must see themselves as part of a group and being part of that group must also be salient for the individual 20 Craig McGarty Russell Spears and Vincent Y Yzerbyt 2002 argued that the cognitive functions of stereotyping are best understood in relation to its social functions and vice versa 34 Cognitive functions edit Stereotypes can help make sense of the world They are a form of categorization that helps to simplify and systematize information Thus information is more easily identified recalled predicted and reacted to 20 Stereotypes are categories of objects or people Between stereotypes objects or people are as different from each other as possible 6 Within stereotypes objects or people are as similar to each other as possible 6 Gordon Allport has suggested possible answers to why people find it easier to understand categorized information 35 First people can consult a category to identify response patterns Second categorized information is more specific than non categorized information as categorization accentuates properties that are shared by all members of a group Third people can readily describe objects in a category because objects in the same category have distinct characteristics Finally people can take for granted the characteristics of a particular category because the category itself may be an arbitrary grouping A complementary perspective theorizes how stereotypes function as time and energy savers that allow people to act more efficiently 6 Yet another perspective suggests that stereotypes are people s biased perceptions of their social contexts 6 In this view people use stereotypes as shortcuts to make sense of their social contexts and this makes a person s task of understanding his or her world less cognitively demanding 6 Social functions edit Social categorization edit In the following situations the overarching purpose of stereotyping is for people to put their collective self their in group membership in a positive light 36 when stereotypes are used for explaining social events when stereotypes are used for justifying activities of one s own group ingroup to another group outgroup when stereotypes are used for differentiating the ingroup as positively distinct from outgroupsExplanation purposes edit nbsp An antisemitic 1873 caricature depicting the stereotypical physical features of a Jewish maleAs mentioned previously stereotypes can be used to explain social events 20 36 Henri Tajfel 20 described his observations of how some people found that the antisemitic fabricated contents of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion only made sense if Jews have certain characteristics Therefore according to Tajfel 20 Jews were stereotyped as being evil and yearning for world domination to match the antisemitic facts as presented in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion Justification purposes edit People create stereotypes of an outgroup to justify the actions that their in group has committed or plans to commit towards that outgroup 20 35 36 For example according to Tajfel 20 Europeans stereotyped African Indian and Chinese people as being incapable of achieving financial advances without European help This stereotype was used to justify European colonialism in Africa India and China Intergroup differentiation edit An assumption is that people want their ingroup to have a positive image relative to outgroups and so people want to differentiate their ingroup from relevant outgroups in a desirable way 20 If an outgroup does not affect the ingroup s image then from an image preservation point of view there is no point for the ingroup to be positively distinct from that outgroup 20 People can actively create certain images for relevant outgroups by stereotyping People do so when they see that their ingroup is no longer as clearly and or as positively differentiated from relevant outgroups and they want to restore the intergroup differentiation to a state that favours the ingroup 20 36 Self categorization edit Stereotypes can emphasize a person s group membership in two steps Stereotypes emphasize the person s similarities with ingroup members on relevant dimensions and also the person s differences from outgroup members on relevant dimensions 24 People change the stereotype of their ingroups and outgroups to suit context 24 Once an outgroup treats an ingroup member badly they are more drawn to the members of their own group 37 This can be seen as members within a group are able to relate to each other though a stereotype because of identical situations A person can embrace a stereotype to avoid humiliation such as failing a task and blaming it on a stereotype 38 Social influence and consensus edit Stereotypes are an indicator of ingroup consensus 36 When there are intragroup disagreements over stereotypes of the ingroup and or outgroups ingroup members take collective action to prevent other ingroup members from diverging from each other 36 John C Turner proposed in 1987 36 that if ingroup members disagree on an outgroup stereotype then one of three possible collective actions follow First ingroup members may negotiate with each other and conclude that they have different outgroup stereotypes because they are stereotyping different subgroups of an outgroup e g Russian gymnasts versus Russian boxers Second ingroup members may negotiate with each other but conclude that they are disagreeing because of categorical differences amongst themselves Accordingly in this context it is better to categorise ingroup members under different categories e g Democrats versus Republican than under a shared category e g American Finally ingroup members may influence each other to arrive at a common outgroup stereotype Formation editDifferent disciplines give different accounts of how stereotypes develop Psychologists may focus on an individual s experience with groups patterns of communication about those groups and intergroup conflict As for sociologists they may focus on the relations among different groups in a social structure They suggest that stereotypes are the result of conflict poor parenting and inadequate mental and emotional development Once stereotypes have formed there are two main factors that explain their persistence First the cognitive effects of schematic processing see schema make it so that when a member of a group behaves as we expect the behavior confirms and even strengthens existing stereotypes Second the affective or emotional aspects of prejudice render logical arguments against stereotypes ineffective in countering the power of emotional responses 39 Correspondence bias edit Main article Correspondence bias Correspondence bias refers to the tendency to ascribe a person s behavior to disposition or personality and to underestimate the extent to which situational factors elicited the behavior Correspondence bias can play an important role in stereotype formation 40 For example in a study by Roguer and Yzerbyt 1999 participants watched a video showing students who were randomly instructed to find arguments either for or against euthanasia The students that argued in favor of euthanasia came from the same law department or from different departments Results showed that participants attributed the students responses to their attitudes although it had been made clear in the video that students had no choice about their position Participants reported that group membership i e the department that the students belonged to affected the students opinions about euthanasia Law students were perceived to be more in favor of euthanasia than students from different departments despite the fact that a pretest had revealed that subjects had no preexisting expectations about attitudes toward euthanasia and the department that students belong to The attribution error created the new stereotype that law students are more likely to support euthanasia 41 Nier et al 2012 found that people who tend to draw dispositional inferences from behavior and ignore situational constraints are more likely to stereotype low status groups as incompetent and high status groups as competent Participants listened to descriptions of two fictitious groups of Pacific Islanders one of which was described as being higher in status than the other In a second study subjects rated actual groups the poor and wealthy women and men in the United States in terms of their competence Subjects who scored high on the measure of correspondence bias stereotyped the poor women and the fictitious lower status Pacific Islanders as incompetent whereas they stereotyped the wealthy men and the high status Pacific Islanders as competent The correspondence bias was a significant predictor of stereotyping even after controlling for other measures that have been linked to beliefs about low status groups the just world hypothesis and social dominance orientation 42 Based on the anti public sector bias 43 Doring and Willems 2021 44 found that employees in the public sector are considered as less professional compared to employees in the private sector They build on the assumption that the red tape and bureaucratic nature of the public sector spills over in the perception that citizens have about the employees working in the sector With an experimental vignette study they analyze how citizens process information on employees sector affiliation and integrate non work role referencing to test the stereotype confirmation assumption underlying the representativeness heuristic The results show that sector as well as non work role referencing influences perceived employee professionalism but has little effect on the confirmation of particular public sector stereotypes 45 Moreover the results do not confirm a congruity effect of consistent stereotypical information non work role referencing does not aggravate the negative effect of sector affiliation on perceived employee professionalism Illusory correlation edit Main article Illusory correlation Research has shown that stereotypes can develop based on a cognitive mechanism known as illusory correlation an erroneous inference about the relationship between two events 6 46 47 If two statistically infrequent events co occur observers overestimate the frequency of co occurrence of these events The underlying reason is that rare infrequent events are distinctive and salient and when paired become even more so The heightened salience results in more attention and more effective encoding which strengthens the belief that the events are correlated 48 49 50 In the inter group context illusory correlations lead people to misattribute rare behaviors or traits at higher rates to minority group members than to majority groups even when both display the same proportion of the behaviors or traits Black people for instance are a minority group in the United States and interaction with blacks is a relatively infrequent event for an average white American 51 Similarly undesirable behavior e g crime is statistically less frequent than desirable behavior Since both events blackness and undesirable behavior are distinctive in the sense that they are infrequent the combination of the two leads observers to overestimate the rate of co occurrence 48 Similarly in workplaces where women are underrepresented and negative behaviors such as errors occur less frequently than positive behaviors women become more strongly associated with mistakes than men 52 In a landmark study David Hamilton and Richard Gifford 1976 examined the role of illusory correlation in stereotype formation Subjects were instructed to read descriptions of behaviors performed by members of groups A and B Negative behaviors outnumbered positive actions and group B was smaller than group A making negative behaviors and membership in group B relatively infrequent and distinctive Participants were then asked who had performed a set of actions a person of group A or group B Results showed that subjects overestimated the frequency with which both distinctive events membership in group B and negative behavior co occurred and evaluated group B more negatively This despite the fact the proportion of positive to negative behaviors was equivalent for both groups and that there was no actual correlation between group membership and behaviors 48 Although Hamilton and Gifford found a similar effect for positive behaviors as the infrequent events a meta analytic review of studies showed that illusory correlation effects are stronger when the infrequent distinctive information is negative 46 Hamilton and Gifford s distinctiveness based explanation of stereotype formation was subsequently extended 49 A 1994 study by McConnell Sherman and Hamilton found that people formed stereotypes based on information that was not distinctive at the time of presentation but was considered distinctive at the time of judgement 53 Once a person judges non distinctive information in memory to be distinctive that information is re encoded and re represented as if it had been distinctive when it was first processed 53 Common environment edit One explanation for why stereotypes are shared is that they are the result of a common environment that stimulates people to react in the same way 6 The problem with the common environment is that explanation in general is that it does not explain how shared stereotypes can occur without direct stimuli 6 Research since the 1930s suggested that people are highly similar with each other in how they describe different racial and national groups although those people have no personal experience with the groups they are describing 54 Socialization and upbringing edit Another explanation says that people are socialised to adopt the same stereotypes 6 Some psychologists believe that although stereotypes can be absorbed at any age stereotypes are usually acquired in early childhood under the influence of parents teachers peers and the media If stereotypes are defined by social values then stereotypes only change as per changes in social values 6 The suggestion that stereotype content depends on social values reflects Walter Lippman s argument in his 1922 publication that stereotypes are rigid because they cannot be changed at will 17 Studies emerging since the 1940s refuted the suggestion that stereotype contents cannot be changed at will Those studies suggested that one group s stereotype of another group would become more or less positive depending on whether their intergroup relationship had improved or degraded 17 55 56 Intergroup events e g World War II Persian Gulf conflicts often changed intergroup relationships For example after WWII Black American students held a more negative stereotype of people from countries that were the United States s WWII enemies 17 If there are no changes to an intergroup relationship then relevant stereotypes do not change 18 Intergroup relations edit According to a third explanation shared stereotypes are neither caused by the coincidence of common stimuli nor by socialisation This explanation posits that stereotypes are shared because group members are motivated to behave in certain ways and stereotypes reflect those behaviours 6 It is important to note from this explanation that stereotypes are the consequence not the cause of intergroup relations This explanation assumes that when it is important for people to acknowledge both their ingroup and outgroup they will emphasise their difference from outgroup members and their similarity to ingroup members 6 International migration creates more opportunities for intergroup relations but the interactions do not always disconfirm stereotypes They are also known to form and maintain them 57 Activation editThe dual process model of cognitive processing of stereotypes asserts that automatic activation of stereotypes is followed by a controlled processing stage during which an individual may choose to disregard or ignore the stereotyped information that has been brought to mind 19 A number of studies have found that stereotypes are activated automatically Patricia Devine 1989 for example suggested that stereotypes are automatically activated in the presence of a member or some symbolic equivalent of a stereotyped group and that the unintentional activation of the stereotype is equally strong for high and low prejudice persons Words related to the cultural stereotype of blacks were presented subliminally During an ostensibly unrelated impression formation task subjects read a paragraph describing a race unspecified target person s behaviors and rated the target person on several trait scales Results showed that participants who received a high proportion of racial words rated the target person in the story as significantly more hostile than participants who were presented with a lower proportion of words related to the stereotype This effect held true for both high and low prejudice subjects as measured by the Modern Racism Scale Thus the racial stereotype was activated even for low prejudice individuals who did not personally endorse it 19 58 59 Studies using alternative priming methods have shown that the activation of gender and age stereotypes can also be automatic 60 61 Subsequent research suggested that the relation between category activation and stereotype activation was more complex 59 62 Lepore and Brown 1997 for instance noted that the words used in Devine s study were both neutral category labels e g Blacks and stereotypic attributes e g lazy They argued that if only the neutral category labels were presented people high and low in prejudice would respond differently In a design similar to Devine s Lepore and Brown primed the category of African Americans using labels such as blacks and West Indians and then assessed the differential activation of the associated stereotype in the subsequent impression formation task They found that high prejudice participants increased their ratings of the target person on the negative stereotypic dimensions and decreased them on the positive dimension whereas low prejudice subjects tended in the opposite direction The results suggest that the level of prejudice and stereotype endorsement affects people s judgements when the category and not the stereotype per se is primed 63 Research has shown that people can be trained to activate counterstereotypic information and thereby reduce the automatic activation of negative stereotypes In a study by Kawakami et al 2000 for example participants were presented with a category label and taught to respond No to stereotypic traits and Yes to nonstereotypic traits After this training period subjects showed reduced stereotype activation 64 65 This effect is based on the learning of new and more positive stereotypes rather than the negation of already existing ones 65 Automatic behavioral outcomes edit Empirical evidence suggests that stereotype activation can automatically influence social behavior 66 67 68 69 For example Bargh Chen and Burrows 1996 activated the stereotype of the elderly among half of their participants by administering a scrambled sentence test where participants saw words related to age stereotypes Subjects primed with the stereotype walked significantly more slowly than the control group although the test did not include any words specifically referring to slowness thus acting in a way that the stereotype suggests that elderly people will act And the stereotype of the elder will affect the subjective perception of them through depression 70 In another experiment Bargh Chen and Burrows also found that because the stereotype about blacks includes the notion of aggression subliminal exposure to black faces increased the likelihood that randomly selected white college students reacted with more aggression and hostility than participants who subconsciously viewed a white face 71 Similarly Correll et al 2002 showed that activated stereotypes about blacks can influence people s behavior In a series of experiments black and white participants played a video game in which a black or white person was shown holding a gun or a harmless object e g a mobile phone Participants had to decide as quickly as possible whether to shoot the target When the target person was armed both black and white participants were faster in deciding to shoot the target when he was black than when he was white When the target was unarmed the participants avoided shooting him more quickly when he was white Time pressure made the shooter bias even more pronounced 72 Accuracy edit nbsp A magazine feature from Beauty Parade from March 1952 stereotyping women drivers It features Bettie Page as the model Stereotypes can be efficient shortcuts and sense making tools They can however keep people from processing new or unexpected information about each individual thus biasing the impression formation process 6 Early researchers believed that stereotypes were inaccurate representations of reality 54 A series of pioneering studies in the 1930s found no empirical support for widely held racial stereotypes 17 By the mid 1950s Gordon Allport wrote that It is possible for a stereotype to grow in defiance of all evidence 35 Research on the role of illusory correlations in the formation of stereotypes suggests that stereotypes can develop because of incorrect inferences about the relationship between two events e g membership in a social group and bad or good attributes This means that at least some stereotypes are inaccurate 46 48 50 53 A 1995 book by Yueh Ting Lee et al argued that stereotypes are sometimes accurate 73 Similarly a 2015 study by Jussim et al reviewed four studies of racial stereotypes and seven studies of gender stereotypes regarding demographic characteristics academic achievement personality and behavior and argued that some aspects of ethnic and gender stereotypes are accurate while stereotypes concerning political affiliation and nationality are much less accurate 74 A 2005 study by Terracciano et al found that stereotypic beliefs about nationality do not reflect the actual personality traits of people from different cultures 75 In a 1973 paper Marlene MacKie argued that while stereotypes are inaccurate this is a definition rather than empirical claim stereotypes were simply defined as inaccurate even though the supposed inaccuracy of stereotypes was treated as though it was an empirical discovery 76 Effects editAttributional ambiguity edit Main article Attributional ambiguity Attributive ambiguity refers to the uncertainty that members of stereotyped groups experience in interpreting the causes of others behavior toward them Stereotyped individuals who receive negative feedback can attribute it either to personal shortcomings such as lack of ability or poor effort or the evaluator s stereotypes and prejudice toward their social group Alternatively positive feedback can either be attributed to personal merit or discounted as a form of sympathy or pity 77 78 79 Crocker et al 1991 showed that when black participants were evaluated by a white person who was aware of their race black subjects mistrusted the feedback attributing negative feedback to the evaluator s stereotypes and positive feedback to the evaluator s desire to appear unbiased When the black participants race was unknown to the evaluator they were more accepting of the feedback 80 Attributional ambiguity has been shown to affect a person s self esteem When they receive positive evaluations stereotyped individuals are uncertain of whether they really deserved their success and consequently they find it difficult to take credit for their achievements In the case of negative feedback ambiguity has been shown to have a protective effect on self esteem as it allows people to assign blame to external causes Some studies however have found that this effect only holds when stereotyped individuals can be absolutely certain that their negative outcomes are due to the evaluators s prejudice If any room for uncertainty remains stereotyped individuals tend to blame themselves 78 Attributional ambiguity can also make it difficult to assess one s skills because performance related evaluations are mistrusted or discounted Moreover it can lead to the belief that one s efforts are not directly linked to the outcomes thereby depressing one s motivation to succeed 77 Stereotype threat edit nbsp The effect of stereotype threat ST on math test scores for girls and boys Data from Osborne 2007 81 Main article Stereotype threat Stereotype threat occurs when people are aware of a negative stereotype about their social group and experience anxiety or concern that they might confirm the stereotype 82 Stereotype threat has been shown to undermine performance in a variety of domains 83 84 Claude M Steele and Joshua Aronson conducted the first experiments showing that stereotype threat can depress intellectual performance on standardized tests In one study they found that black college students performed worse than white students on a verbal test when the task was framed as a measure of intelligence When it was not presented in that manner the performance gap narrowed Subsequent experiments showed that framing the test as diagnostic of intellectual ability made black students more aware of negative stereotypes about their group which in turn impaired their performance 85 Stereotype threat effects have been demonstrated for an array of social groups in many different arenas including not only academics but also sports 86 chess 87 and business 88 Some researchers have suggested that stereotype threat should not be interpreted as a factor in real life performance gaps and have raised the possibility of publication bias 89 90 91 Other critics have focused on correcting what they claim are misconceptions of early studies showing a large effect 92 However meta analyses and systematic reviews have shown significant evidence for the effects of stereotype threat though the phenomenon defies over simplistic characterization 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 Self fulfilling prophecy edit Main article Self fulfilling prophecy Stereotypes lead people to expect certain actions from members of social groups These stereotype based expectations may lead to self fulfilling prophecies in which one s inaccurate expectations about a person s behavior through social interaction prompt that person to act in stereotype consistent ways thus confirming one s erroneous expectations and validating the stereotype 101 102 103 Word Zanna and Cooper 1974 demonstrated the effects of stereotypes in the context of a job interview White participants interviewed black and white subjects who prior to the experiments had been trained to act in a standardized manner Analysis of the videotaped interviews showed that black job applicants were treated differently They received shorter amounts of interview time and less eye contact interviewers made more speech errors e g stutters sentence incompletions incoherent sounds and physically distanced themselves from black applicants In a second experiment trained interviewers were instructed to treat applicants all of whom were white like the whites or blacks had been treated in the first experiment As a result applicants treated like the blacks of the first experiment behaved in a more nervous manner and received more negative performance ratings than interviewees receiving the treatment previously afforded to whites 104 A 1977 study by Snyder Tanke and Berscheid found a similar pattern in social interactions between men and women Male undergraduate students were asked to talk to female undergraduates whom they believed to be physically attractive or unattractive on the phone The conversations were taped and analysis showed that men who thought that they were talking to an attractive woman communicated in a more positive and friendlier manner than men who believed that they were talking to unattractive women This altered the women s behavior Female subjects who unknowingly to them were perceived to be physically attractive behaved in a friendly likeable and sociable manner in comparison with subjects who were regarded as unattractive 105 A 2005 study by J Thomas Kellow and Brett D Jones looked at the effects of self fulfilling prophecy on African American and Caucasian high school freshman students Both white and black students were informed that their test performance would be predictive of their performance on a statewide high stakes standardized test They were also told that historically white students had outperformed black students on the test This knowledge created a self fulfilling prophecy in both the white and black students where the white students scored statistically significantly higher than the African American students on the test The stereotype threat of underperforming on standardized tests affected the African American students in this study 106 In accountancy there is a popular stereotype which represents members of the profession as being humorless introspective beancounters 107 108 Discrimination and prejudice edit Because stereotypes simplify and justify social reality they have potentially powerful effects on how people perceive and treat one another 109 As a result stereotypes can lead to discrimination in labor markets and other domains 110 For example Tilcsik 2011 has found that employers who seek job applicants with stereotypically male heterosexual traits are particularly likely to engage in discrimination against gay men suggesting that discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is partly rooted in specific stereotypes and that these stereotypes loom large in many labor markets 21 Agerstrom and Rooth 2011 showed that automatic obesity stereotypes captured by the Implicit Association Test can predict real hiring discrimination against the obese 111 Similarly experiments suggest that gender stereotypes play an important role in judgments that affect hiring decisions 112 113 Stereotypes can cause racist prejudice For example scientists and activists have warned that the use of the stereotype Nigerian Prince for referring to Advance fee scammers is racist i e reducing Nigeria to a nation of scammers and fraudulent princes as some people still do online is a stereotype that needs to be called out 114 Self stereotyping edit Main article Self stereotyping Stereotypes can affect self evaluations and lead to self stereotyping 8 115 For instance Correll 2001 2004 found that specific stereotypes e g the stereotype that women have lower mathematical ability affect women s and men s evaluations of their abilities e g in math and science such that men assess their own task ability higher than women performing at the same level 116 117 Similarly a study by Sinclair et al 2006 has shown that Asian American women rated their math ability more favorably when their ethnicity and the relevant stereotype that Asian Americans excel in math was made salient In contrast they rated their math ability less favorably when their gender and the corresponding stereotype of women s inferior math skills was made salient Sinclair et al found however that the effect of stereotypes on self evaluations is mediated by the degree to which close people in someone s life endorse these stereotypes People s self stereotyping can increase or decrease depending on whether close others view them in stereotype consistent or inconsistent manner 118 Stereotyping can also play a central role in depression when people have negative self stereotypes about themselves According to Cox Abramson Devine and Hollon 2012 8 stereotyping can also play a central role in depression which is characterized by negative self schemas Stereotypes and self schemas are the same type of cognitive structure therefore they suggest that an integrated perspective of prejudice and depression provides useful insight on how stereotypes are acquired Negative stereotypes are set in motion within the Source who conveys the prejudice towards the Target which in turn will lead the Target to suffer from depression Members of stigmatized groups may internalize the negative evaluation of their group and develop depression People may also show prejudice internalization through self stereotyping because of negative childhood experiences such as verbal and physical abuse This depression that is caused by prejudice i e deprejudice can be related to group membership e g Me Gay Bad or not e g Me Bad If someone holds prejudicial beliefs about a stigmatized group and then becomes a member of that group they may internalize their prejudice and develop depression People may also show prejudice internalization through self stereotyping because of negative childhood experiences such as verbal and physical abuse 119 Substitute for observations edit Stereotypes are traditional and familiar symbol clusters expressing a more or less complex idea in a convenient way They are often simplistic pronouncements about gender racial ethnic and cultural backgrounds and they can become a source of misinformation and delusion For example in a school when students are confronted with the task of writing a theme they think in terms of literary associations often using stereotypes picked up from books films and magazines that they have read or viewed The danger in stereotyping lies not in its existence but in the fact that it can become a substitute for observation and a misinterpretation of a cultural identity 120 Promoting information literacy is a pedagogical approach that can effectively combat the entrenchment of stereotypes The necessity for using information literacy to separate multicultural fact from fiction is well illustrated with examples from literature and media 121 Role in art and culture edit nbsp American political cartoon titled The Usual Irish Way of Doing Things depicting a drunken Irishman lighting a powder keg and swinging a bottle Published in Harper s Weekly 1871 Stereotypes are common in various cultural media where they take the form of dramatic stock characters The instantly recognizable nature of stereotypes mean that they are effective in advertising and situation comedy 122 Alexander Fedorov 2015 proposed a concept of media stereotypes analysis This concept refers to identification and analysis of stereotypical images of people ideas events stories themes etc in media context 123 The characters that do appear in movies greatly affect how people worldwide perceive gender relations race and cultural communities Because approximately 85 of worldwide ticket sales are directed toward Hollywood movies the American movie industry has been greatly responsible for portraying characters of different cultures and diversity to fit into stereotypical categories 124 This has led to the spread and persistence of gender racial ethnic and cultural stereotypes seen in the movies 89 For example Russians are usually portrayed as ruthless agents brutal mobsters and villains in Hollywood movies 125 126 127 According to Russian American professor Nina L Khrushcheva You can t even turn the TV on and go to the movies without reference to Russians as horrible 128 The portrayals of Latin Americans in film and print media are restricted to a narrow set of characters Latin Americans are largely depicted as sexualized figures such as the Latino macho or the Latina vixen gang members illegal immigrants or entertainers By comparison they are rarely portrayed as working professionals business leaders or politicians 112 In Hollywood films there are several Latin American stereotypes that have historically been used Some examples are El Bandido the Halfbreed Harlot The Male Buffoon The Female Clown The Latin Lover The Dark Lady The Wise Old Man and The Poor Peon Many Hispanic characters in Hollywood films consists of one or more of these basic stereotypes but it has been rare to view Latin American actors representing characters outside of this stereotypical criteria 129 Media stereotypes of women first emerged in the early 20th century Various stereotypic depictions or types of women appeared in magazines including Victorian ideals of femininity the New Woman the Gibson Girl the Femme fatale and the Flapper 88 130 Stereotypes are also common in video games with women being portrayed as stereotypes such as the damsel in distress or as sexual objects see Gender representation in video games 131 Studies show that minorities are portrayed most often in stereotypical roles such as athletes and gangsters 132 see Race and video games In literature and art stereotypes are cliched or predictable characters or situations Throughout history storytellers have drawn from stereotypical characters and situations to immediately connect the audience with new tales 133 Role in sports edit Female athletes encounter various pressures and stereotypes which have significant psychological consequences These stereotypes give rise to challenges in athletes lives including diminished self esteem leading to more profound psychological impacts Female athletes have made considerable strides in overcoming obstacles They have transitioned from being unable to compete competitively due to biological misconceptions to having equal opportunities as male athletes thanks to Title IX 134 Today there is greater societal acceptance of female athletes However the intersection of being a female athlete adds additional pressures Not only are they expected to excel in competition but they are also required to conform to societal expectations of femininity Furthermore female athletes often face scrutiny and criticism regarding their appearance compared to non athletic women Young athletes in particular confront an intensified amount of pressure leading some to quit sports because it is no longer enjoyable and the implications of being a young female athlete become overwhelming They are unfairly labeled as gay or delicate and subjected to derogatory comments such as like a girl Additionally they grapple with body image concerns that can give rise to severe health issues Even specific sports contribute to the scrutiny female athletes face with criticism directed at the uniforms required for competition 134 The proliferation of stereotypes in women s sports has resulted in a decline in female participation These social stigmas including being labeled as gay or delicate and the expectation to play in a manner deemed like a girl have contributed to body image issues eating disorders and depression among numerous female athletes See also editArchetype Attribute substitution Attribution bias Base rate fallacy Cognitive bias Conjunction fallacy Linda problem Counterstereotype antonym Echo chamber media Ethnocentrism Face ism Filter Bubble Habitus sociology Implicit stereotype In group favoritism Labelling Labeling theory Negativity effect Out group homogeneity Role Role reversal Role suction Scapegoating Similarity philosophy Statistical syllogism Stigma management Stigmatization Stock character Trait ascription bias Women are wonderful effectGenderGender stereotypes Femininity Masculinity nbsp Psychology portal nbsp Society portalExamples of stereotypes edit Cultural and ethnicEthnic stereotype List of ethnic slurs Stereotypes of African Americans Stereotypes of Africans Stereotypes of Americans Stereotypes of Arabs and Muslims in the United States Stereotypes of Argentines Stereotypes of the British Stereotypes of Canadians Stereotypes of French people Stereotypes of Germans Stereotypes of groups within the United States Stereotypes of Hispanic and Latino Americans in the United States Stereotypes of Indigenous peoples of Canada and the United States Stereotypes of Japanese people Stereotypes of Jews Stereotypes of Russians Stereotypes of South Asians Stereotypes of East and Southeast AsiansSexuality relatedLGBT stereotypes List of sexuality related phobiasOtherBlonde stereotypes Nurse stereotypes Physical attractiveness stereotypeReferences edit Critchfield Austi 15 November 2017 This is Why Doughnuts Are Associated With Cops Spoon University Archived from the original on 19 November 2017 Retrieved 2 November 2020 The funny thing is the whole cop and doughnuts thing is completely out of date today an officer could just as easily swing through a McDonald s drive through as he could a Krispy Kreme Yet the stereotype endures even though police aren t seen at doughnut shops in nearly the numbers they used to have been In a way it s become a stereotype of itself which is pretty meta Cardwell Mike 1999 Dictionary of Psychology Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn ISBN 9781579580643 Myers David G Twenge Jean M 2013 Social Psychology 11th ed New York McGraw Hill ISBN 9780078035296 OCLC 795645100 page needed Frequently Asked Questions Implicit Harvard edu Retrieved 14 April 2018 a b Hinton Perry 1 September 2017 Implicit stereotypes and the predictive brain Cognition and culture in biased person perception Palgrave Communications 3 1 1 9 doi 10 1057 palcomms 2017 86 S2CID 54036730 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n McGarty Craig Yzerbyt Vincent Y Spears Russel 2002 Social cultural and cognitive factors in stereotype formation PDF Stereotypes as explanations The formation of meaningful beliefs about social groups Cambridge University Press pp 1 15 ISBN 9780521800471 Judd Charles M Park Bernadette 1993 Definition and assessment of accuracy in social stereotypes Psychological Review 100 1 109 128 doi 10 1037 0033 295X 100 1 109 PMID 8426877 a b c d e Cox William T L Abramson Lyn Y Devine Patricia G Hollon Steven D September 2012 Stereotypes Prejudice and Depression The Integrated Perspective Perspectives on Psychological Science 7 5 427 449 doi 10 1177 1745691612455204 PMID 26168502 S2CID 1512121 Chakkarath Pradeep March 2010 Stereotypes in social psychology The West East differentiation as a reflection of Western traditions of thought Psychological Studies 55 1 18 25 doi 10 1007 s12646 010 0002 9 S2CID 144061506 Liddell Henry George Scott Robert stereos A Greek English Lexicon via Perseus Digital Library Liddell Henry George Scott Robert typos A Greek English Lexicon via Perseus Digital Library Harper Douglas stereotype Origin and meaning Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 22 October 2017 Kleg Milton 1993 Hate Prejudice and Racism Albany State University of New York Press pp 135 137 ISBN 9780585054919 Vega Tanzina Working while brown What discrimination looks like now CNNMoney Retrieved 26 March 2018 a b c Fiske Susan T 1998 Stereotyping Prejudice and Discrimination In Gilbert Daniel T Fiske Susan T Lindzey Gardner eds The Handbook of Social Psychology Vol 2 4th ed Boston Massachusetts McGraw Hill p 357 ISBN 9780195213768 a b c d Denmark Florence L 2010 Prejudice and Discrimination In Weiner Irving B Craigheaid W Edward eds The Corsini Encyclopedia of Psychology Vol 3 4th ed Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley p 1277 ISBN 9780470479216 a b c d e f Katz Daniel Braly Kenneth W 1935 Racial prejudice and racial stereotypes The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 30 2 175 193 doi 10 1037 h0059800 a b Oakes P J Haslam S A Turner J C 1994 Stereotyping and Social Reality Oxford Blackwell a b c Devine Patricia G 1989 Stereotypes and Prejudice Their Automatic and Controlled Components Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 56 1 5 18 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 56 1 5 S2CID 33975027 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Tajfel Henri 1981 Social stereotypes and social groups In Turner John C Giles Howard eds Intergroup behaviour Oxford Blackwell pp 144 167 ISBN 9780631117117 a b Tilcsik Andras 2011 Pride and Prejudice Employment Discrimination against Openly Gay Men in the United States American Journal of Sociology 117 2 586 626 doi 10 1086 661653 hdl 1807 34998 PMID 22268247 S2CID 23542996 a b Operario Don Fiske Susan T 2003 Stereotypes Content Structures Processes and Context In Brown Rupert Gaertner Samuel L eds Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology Intergroup Processes Malden Massachusetts Blackwell pp 22 44 ISBN 9781405106542 a b Fiske Susan T Cuddy Amy J C Glick Peter Xu Jun 2002 A Model of Often Mixed Stereotype Content Competence and Warmth Respectively Follow From Perceived Status and Competition PDF Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 82 6 878 902 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 320 4001 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 82 6 878 PMID 12051578 S2CID 17057403 a b c Cuddy Amy J C Fiske Susan T 2002 Doddering But Dear Process Content and Function in Stereotyping of Older Persons In Nelson Todd D ed Ageism Stereotyping and Prejudice against Older Persons Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press pp 7 8 ISBN 9780262140775 Dovidio John F Gaertner Samuel L 2010 Intergroup Bias In Susan T Fiske Gilbert Daniel T Lindzey Gardner eds Handbook of Social Psychology Vol 2 5th ed Hooboken New Jersey John Wiley p 1085 ISBN 9780470137475 Cuddy Amy J C Fiske Susan T Kwan Virginia S Y Glick Peter Demoulin Stephanie Leyens Jacques Philippe Bond Michael Harris Croizet Jean Claude Ellemers Naomi Sleebos Ed Htun Tin Tin Kim Hyun Jeong Maio Greg Perry Judi Petkova Kristina Todorov Valery Rodriguez Bailon Rosa Morales Elena Moya Miguel Palacios Marisol Smith Vanessa Perez Rolando Vala Jorge Ziegler Rene March 2009 Stereotype content model across cultures Towards universal similarities and some differences British Journal of Social Psychology 48 1 1 33 doi 10 1348 014466608X314935 PMC 3912751 PMID 19178758 a b Koch A Imhoff R Dotsch R Unkelbach C amp Alves H 2016 The ABC of Stereotypes About Groups Agency Socioeconomic Success Conservative Progressive Beliefs and Communion Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 110 675 709 https doi org 10 1037 pspa0000046 Groups warmth is a personal matter Understanding consensus on stereotype dimensions reconciles adversarial models of social evaluation Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 89 103995 https doi org https doi org 10 1016 j jesp 2020 103995 Koch A Yzerbyt V Abele A Ellemers N amp Fiske S T 2021 Chapter One Social evaluation Comparing models across interpersonal intragroup intergroup several group and many group contexts In Gawronski B ed Advances in Experimental Social Psychology Vol 63 pp 1 68 Academic Press https doi org https doi org 10 1016 bs aesp 2020 11 001 Dragon P Holland R Szumowska E Suska A Kossowska M amp Wigboldus D 2022 Explaining the relationship between agency and communion by means of lay personality theories and connectionist modelling https doi org 10 31234 osf io g847b Cao Y T Sotnikova A Daum e H Rudinger R amp Zou L X 2022 Theory grounded Measurement of U S Social Stereotypes in English Language Models North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics Koch A Dorrough A Glockner A amp Imhoff R 2020 The ABC of society Perceived similarity in agency socioeconomic success and conservative progressive beliefs increases intergroup cooperation Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 90 103996 https doi org https doi org 10 1016 j jesp 2020 103996 Macrae C N Stangor C Hewstone M eds 1995 Stereotypes and Stereotyping p 4 McGarty Craig Spears Russel Yzerbyt Vincent Y 2002 Conclusion stereotypes are selective variable and contested explanations Stereotypes as explanations The formation of meaningful beliefs about social groups Cambridge University Press pp 186 199 ISBN 9780521800471 a b c Allport Gordon W 1954 The Nature of Prejudice Cambridge Massachusetts Addison Wesley p 189 ISBN 9780201001754 a b c d e f g Haslam S Alexander Turner John C Oakes Penelope J Reynolds Katherine J Doosje Bertjan 2002 From personal pictures in the head to collective tools in the world How shared stereotypes allow groups to represent 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correspondence bias and the emergence of stereotypes PDF Swiss Journal of Psychology 58 4 233 240 doi 10 1024 1421 0185 58 4 233 Archived from the original PDF on 29 July 2013 Retrieved 5 April 2013 Nier Jason A Bajaj Priya McLean Meghan C Schwartz Elizabeth 2012 Group status perceptions of agency and the correspondence bias Attributional processes in the formation of stereotypes about high and low status groups Group Processes amp Intergroup Relations 16 4 476 487 doi 10 1177 1368430212454925 S2CID 145399213 Marvel John D 30 January 2015 Unconscious Bias in Citizens Evaluations of Public Sector Performance Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory muu053 doi 10 1093 jopart muu053 ISSN 1053 1858 Doring Matthias Willems Jurgen 22 September 2021 Processing stereotypes Professionalism confirmed or disconfirmed by sector affiliation International Public Management Journal 26 2 221 239 doi 10 1080 10967494 2021 1971125 ISSN 1096 7494 S2CID 239261451 Willems Jurgen 2020 Public 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Social Psychology of Stereotypes In Smelser Neil Baltes Paul eds International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences New York Pergamon pp 15100 15104 doi 10 1016 B0 08 043076 7 01754 X ISBN 9780080430768 Fiske Susan T Lee Tiane L 2008 Stereotypes and prejudice create workplace discrimination In Brief Arthur P ed Diversity at Work New York Cambridge University Press pp 13 52 ISBN 9780521860307 Agerstrom Jens Rooth Dan Olof 2011 The role of automatic obesity stereotypes in real hiring discrimination Journal of Applied Psychology 96 4 790 805 doi 10 1037 a0021594 PMID 21280934 a b Picho K Rodriguez A Finnie L May 2013 Exploring the moderating role of context on the mathematics performance of females under stereotype threat a meta analysis The Journal of Social Psychology 153 3 299 333 doi 10 1080 00224545 2012 737380 PMID 23724702 S2CID 45950675 Rudman Laurie A Glick Peter 2001 Prescriptive Gender Stereotypes and Backlash toward Agentic Women PDF Journal of Social Issues 57 4 743 762 doi 10 1111 0022 4537 00239 hdl 2027 42 146421 S2CID 54219902 Archived from the original PDF on 6 November 2012 Yeku James 9 September 2020 Anti Afropolitan ethics and the performative politics of online scambaiting Social Dynamics 46 2 240 258 doi 10 1080 02533952 2020 1813943 ISSN 0253 3952 S2CID 222232833 Sinclair Stacey Huntsinger Jeff 2006 The Interpersonal Basis of Self Stereotyping In Levin Shana Van Laar Colette eds Stigma and Group Inequality Social Psychological Perspectives Claremont Symposium on Applied Social Psychology Mahwah New Jersey Lawrence Erlbaum Associates p 239 ISBN 9780805844153 Correll Shelley J 2001 Gender and the career choice process The role of biased self assessments PDF American Journal of Sociology 106 6 1691 1730 doi 10 1086 321299 S2CID 142863258 Archived from the original PDF on 12 September 2011 Correll Shelley J 2004 Constraints into Preferences Gender Status and Emerging Career Aspirations PDF American Sociological Review 69 1 93 113 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Vocational Behavior 50 Mou Yi Peng Wei Gender and Racial Stereotypes in Popular Video Games PDF Michigan State University Burgess Melinda Dill Karen 15 September 2011 Playing With Prejudice The Prevalence and Consequences of Racial Stereotypes in Video Games Media Psychology 14 3 289 311 doi 10 1080 15213269 2011 596467 S2CID 1416833 Auracher Jan Hirose Akiko 2017 The Influence of Reader s Stereotypes on the Assessment of Fictional Characters Comparative Literature Studies 54 4 795 823 doi 10 5325 complitstudies 54 4 0795 JSTOR 10 5325 complitstudies 54 4 0795 S2CID 148778808 a b Wartel Jennifer 5 May 2021 Stereotypes in Women s Sports and their Psychological Effects Academic Festival Further reading edit nbsp Scholia has a topic profile for Stereotype Hilton James L von Hippel William 1996 Stereotypes Annual Review of Psychology 47 1 237 271 doi 10 1146 annurev psych 47 1 237 PMID 15012482 Ewen Stuart Ewen Elizabeth 2006 Typecasting On the Arts and Sciences of Human Inequality New York Seven Stories Press Stereotype amp Society A Major Resource Constantly updated and archived Regenberg Nina 2007 Are Blonds Really Dumb The Inquisitive Mind 3 Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 4 May 2010 Are Stereotypes True Beta In Mind org Archived from the original on 24 July 2010 Retrieved 25 July 2018 Turner Chris 2004 Planet Simpson How a Cartoon Masterpiece Documented an Era and Defined a Generation Foreword by Douglas Coupland Toronto Random House Canada ISBN 9780679313182 OCLC 55682258 Crawford M Unger R 2004 Women and Gender A Feminist Psychology New York McGraw Hill pp 45 49 Spitzer B L Henderson K Zavian M T 1999 Gender differences in population versus media body sizes A comparison over four decades Sex Roles 40 7 8 545 565 doi 10 1023 a 1018836029738 S2CID 55674520 External links edit nbsp Media related to Stereotypes at Wikimedia Commons nbsp The dictionary definition of stereotype at Wiktionary Interview with social psychologists Susan Fiske and Mike North about the stereotyping of older people How gender stereotypes influence emerging career aspirations lecture by Stanford University sociologist Shelley Correll on 21 October 2010 Social Psychology Network Stereotyping Stereotypes Media Smarts Canada s Centre for Digital and Media Literacy Age and Health based stereotyping Age and Health based stereotyping The Danger of a Single Story TEDTalk by Chimamanda Adichie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stereotype amp oldid 1205754071, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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