Title of article :
The world in black and white: Ostracism enhances the categorical perception of social information
Author/Authors :
Sacco، نويسنده , , Donald F. and Wirth، نويسنده , , James H. and Hugenberg، نويسنده , , Kurt and Chen، نويسنده , , Zhansheng and Williams، نويسنده , , Kipling D.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
7
From page :
836
To page :
842
Abstract :
In two experiments, ostracized individuals showed more pronounced categorical perception of inclusion- and exclusion-related stimuli. Specifically, ostracism enhanced the ability to distinguish between-category differences (e.g., between happy and angry faces) relative to within-category differences (e.g., between two happy expressions). Participants were socially included or excluded via Cyberball (a virtual ball-tossing task). In Experiment 1, ostracized participants showed greater perceptual acuity in distinguishing between subtly happy and angry expressions combined with a reduced ability to discriminate expressions within each expression category. Experiment 2 found analogous categorical perception effects for targets varying on the dimension of race. Importantly, this effect was specific to social information; categorical perception of non-social objects was not qualified by social exclusion. These results suggest that ostracism exacerbates categorical perception, attuning perceivers to the differences between various inclusion- and exclusion-related categories relative to within category acuity, making the world appear more ‘black-and-white’ than it might otherwise.
Keywords :
visual perception , social perception , motivation , social exclusion , Categorization
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number :
1959957
Link To Document :
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