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Construal level mind-sets moderate self- and social stereotyping.
127
Citations
60
References
2011
Year
Social PsychologySocial CategorizationCognitionBroad CategorizationsSocial SciencesPsychologyIntergroup RelationAbstract LevelStereotypesConstrual Level TheoryMindsetConformitySocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheoryExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionSocial BehaviorSocial Stereotyping
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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