Publication | Closed Access
Empathy and attitudes: Can feeling for a member of a stigmatized group improve feelings toward the group?
927
Citations
36
References
1997
Year
StigmatizationPsychosocial DeterminantSocial PsychologyEmpathyHomeless ManExperiment 3Social SciencesPsychologyIntergroup RelationPublic HealthSocial StigmaSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesAltruismApplied Social PsychologyStigmatized GroupSocial Identity TheoryPsychosocial ResearchPsychosocial IssueSocial CognitionProsocial BehaviorStigma Studies
Results of 3 experiments suggest that feeling empathy for a member of a stigmatized group can improve attitudes toward the group as a whole. In Experiments 1 and 2, inducing empathy for a young woman with AIDS (Experiment 1) or a homeless man (Experiment 2) led to more positive attitudes toward people with AIDS or toward the homeless, respectively. Experiment 3 tested possible limits of the empathy-attitude effect by inducing empathy toward a member of a highly stigmatized group, convicted murderers, and measuring attitudes toward this group immediately and then 1-2 weeks later. Results provided only weak evidence of improved attitudes toward murderers immediately but strong evidence of improved attitudes 1-2 weeks later.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1