social categorisation, stereotypes and prejudice

    Cards (17)

    • categorisation
      collection of things that have a family resemblance organised around a prototype
    • prototype
      cognitive representation of typical defining features of a category
    • why do we categorise?

      saves cognitive memory
      clarifies perception of the world
      maintain positive self-esteem
    • illusory correlation (Hamilton & Sherman, 1966)

      people inaccurately pair minority groups with negative events or behaviours
      white Americans assumed that black Americans had the highest arrest rates
    • what are the three effects of stereotyping?
      behavioural assimilation, stereotype threat and prejudice
    • behavioural assimilation

      stereotypes influence our behaviour and we assimilate to the labels assigned to us
    • Bargh et al., 1996

      pps asked to create a sentence with words related to the elderly or neutral words
      pps in condition 1 left the room slightly slower than the neutral group, showing their preconceptions of the elderly being slow and fragile
    • stereotype threat

      threat of negative evaluations can lead to poor performance
    • Steele and Aronson (1995)

      negative stereotypes define our group and we behave in line with them
      but negative stereotypes can also bring positive effects as some see it as a challenge and eliminate the effect (Aller et al., 2010)
    • prejudice
      negative views of other people that negatively impact the way we treat and view others. dominated by cognitive bias and negative stereotypes
    • types of prejudice
      reluctance to help - directed to the outgroup
      tokenism - favouring one member of a minority group in an isolated episode
    • what are the three types of subtle prejudice?

      modern racism
      ambivalent racism
      ambivalent sexism
    • modern racism

      blaming the victim
      support of policies that disadvantage racial minorities
    • ambivalent racism
      pity for the disadvantages
      hostility towards the deviant
    • ambivalent sexism

      hostile sexism - paints women in negative light
      benevolent sexism - thinking all women need to be saved or protected.
    • frustration-aggression hypothesis
      individuals need a scapegoat for their frustrations
    • which Freudian coping mechanism does the frustration-aggression hypothesis link to?
      displacement
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