Title of article
The role of intergroup disgust in predicting negative outgroup evaluations
Author/Authors
Hodson، نويسنده , , Gordon and Choma، نويسنده , , Becky L. and Boisvert، نويسنده , , Jacqueline and Hafer، نويسنده , , Carolyn L. and MacInnis، نويسنده , , Cara C. and Costello، نويسنده , , Kimberly، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
11
From page
195
To page
205
Abstract
We introduce intergroup disgust as an individual difference and contextual manipulation. As an individual difference, intergroup disgust sensitivity (ITG-DS) represents affect-laden revulsion toward social outgroups, incorporating beliefs in stigma transfer and social superiority. Study 1 (5 samples, N = 708) validates the ITG-DS scale. Higher ITG-DS scorers demonstrated greater general disgust sensitivity, disease concerns, authoritarian/conservative ideologies, and negative affect. Greater ITG-DS correlated with stronger outgroup threat perceptions and discrimination, and uniquely predicted negative outgroup attitudes beyond well-established prejudice-predictors. Intergroup disgust was experimentally manipulated in Study 2, exposing participants (n = 164) to a travel blog concerning contact with a disgust-evoking (vs. neutral) outgroup. Manipulated disgust generated negative outgroup evaluations through greater threat and anxiety. This mediation effect was moderated: Those higher (vs. lower) in ITG-DS did not experience stronger disgust, threat, or anxiety reactions, but demonstrated stronger translation of aversive reactions (especially outgroup threat) into negative attitudes. Theory development and treatment implications are considered.
Keywords
Intergroup disgust sensitivity , prejudice , Intergroup relations
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1960865
Link To Document