Title of article
Does unfairness feel different if it can be linked to group membership? Cognitive, affective, behavioral and physiological implications of discrimination and unfairness
Author/Authors
Dover، نويسنده , , Tessa L. and Major، نويسنده , , Brenda and Kunstman، نويسنده , , Jonathan W. and Sawyer، نويسنده , , Pamela J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Pages
8
From page
96
To page
103
Abstract
We assessed whether unfair treatment leads to different attributional, emotional, behavioral, and cardiovascular responses depending on whether or not the treatment is group-based. Latino and White men (N = 209) were treated fairly or unfairly by an ingroup or outgroup member. As expected, attributions to discrimination were the greatest among those treated unfairly in an intergroup context. Moreover, among those treated unfairly in an intergroup context, Latinos who did not endorse the protestant work ethic (PWE) responded with more anger, had higher attributions to discrimination, and punished the offender more, compared to Whites and high-PWE Latinos. Cardiovascular responses to unfair intergroup treatment did not differ by ethnicity: unfair intergroup treatment was less threatening (more challenging) when low (vs. high) in PWE. Results suggest that for low-status group members responding to unfair intergroup treatment (i.e., discrimination), identifying the treatment as discriminatory and becoming angry may be more cardiovascularly-adaptive than not. Implications are discussed.
Keywords
Unfairness , Discrimination , Group status , System-legitimizing ideologies , sychophysiology , Cardiovascular Threat
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2015
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1961743
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