Construal level mind-sets moderate self- and social stereotyping
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Construal level theory suggests that events and objects can be represented at either a higher, more abstract level involving consideration of superordinate goals, desirability, global processing, and broad categorizations or a lower, more concrete level involving consideration of subordinate goals, feasibility, local processing, and narrow categorizations. Analogously, social targets (including the self) can be represented more broadly, as members of a group, or more narrowly, as individuals. Because abstract construals induce a similarity focus, they were predicted to increase the perceived fit between social targets and a salient social category. Accordingly, placing individuals into a more abstract construal mind-set via an unrelated task increased the activation and use of stereotypes of salient social groups, stereotype-consistent trait ratings of the self, group identification, and stereotype-consistent performance relative to more concrete construal mind-sets. Thus, nonsocial contextual influences (construal level mind-sets) affect stereotyping of self and others.
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MCCREA, Sean M., Frank WIEBER, Andrea L. MYERS, 2012. Construal level mind-sets moderate self- and social stereotyping. In: Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 2012, 102(1), pp. 51-68. ISSN 0022-3514. eISSN 1939-1315. Available under: doi: 10.1037/a0026108BibTex
@article{McCrea2012-01Const-41419, year={2012}, doi={10.1037/a0026108}, title={Construal level mind-sets moderate self- and social stereotyping}, number={1}, volume={102}, issn={0022-3514}, journal={Journal of Personality and Social Psychology}, pages={51--68}, author={McCrea, Sean M. and Wieber, Frank and Myers, Andrea L.} }
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