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Intergroup behaviour, self‐stereotyping and the salience of social categories
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1987
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Gendered PerceptionSocial PsychologyEducationSocial CategorizationSelf IdentityPsychologySocial SciencesIntergroup RelationIdentity Studies (Intersectionality Studies)Gender IdentitySocietal Identity StudiesGender StudiesStereotypesGroup PsychologySocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesIntergroup BehaviourParticular Social CategorizationApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheorySelf‐categorization TheoryIdentity Studies (Memory Studies)Social CognitionSocial BehaviorSociologySexual Orientation
Recent research favors a social identity approach over group cohesiveness for explaining group behaviour, arguing that self‑categorization transforms individual actions into group actions depending on the social category used. The study aimed to test self‑categorization theory by manipulating sex‑category salience among 60 male and 60 female university students, predicting that heightened salience would elicit self‑categorization, self‑stereotyping, and group behaviour aligned with inter‑sex relations. Participants were exposed to inter‑sex collective versus intra‑sex dyadic encounters while researchers measured self‑categorization, self‑stereotyping, and other behavioural and evaluative indicators of group behaviour. Results showed that increased salience promoted self‑categorization and self‑stereotyping, with males becoming less ethnocentric and reporting higher self‑esteem than females, supporting the salience hypothesis and self‑categorization theory. The authors suggest directions for future research.
Recent research (Hogg & Turner, 1985 a, b ) favours a social identity rather than group cohesiveness analysis of group behaviour and psychological group formation. It is argued that individual behaviour is transformed into group behaviour by the cognitive process of self‐categorization, and that the content of the behaviour depends upon the particular social categorization being employed. The present article examines self‐categorization theory by experimentally varying sex‐category salience for 60 male and 60 female British university students, and monitoring the effects on self‐stereotyping (self‐description in terms of an individual's situation‐specific own‐sex stereotype) and other behavioural and evaluative measures of group behaviour. It was predicted that under conditions theoretically expected to accentuate the salience of sex (intersex collective encounter as opposed to intrasex dyadic encounter), self‐categorization, self‐stereotyping and group behaviour should occur, and that the specific content of this behaviour would be predictable from the nature of the social relations between the sexes. The results revealed that increased salience was associated with self‐categorization and self‐stereotyping, and that under these conditions males were less ethnocentric and experienced higher self‐esteem than females. These findings are consistent with the hypotheses, and thus provide evidence for both self‐categorization theory and the related salience hypothesis upon which the experimental operationalization of salience was based. Suggestions are made for further research.