Publication | Closed Access
Repulsion or attraction? Group membership and assumed attitude similarity.
154
Citations
40
References
2002
Year
Group MembershipSocial PsychologySocial InfluenceAttitude SimilarityPolitical BehaviorAssumed Attitude SimilarityIntergroup RelationSocial SciencesPsychologyAttitude TheoryBiasPrejudiceSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheorySocial BehaviorPolitical AttitudesSocial JudgmentStronger Repulsion EffectsInterpersonal AttractionPersuasion
Three studies investigated group membership effects on similarity-attraction and dissimilarity-repulsion. Membership in an in-group versus out-group was expected to create initially different levels of assumed attitude similarity. In 3 studies, ratings made after participants learned about the target's attitudes were compared with initial attraction based only on knowing target's group membership. Group membership was based on political affiliation in Study 1 and on sexual orientation in Study 2. Study 3 crossed political affiliation with target's obnoxiousness. Attitude dissimilarity produced stronger repulsion effects for in-group than for out-group members in all studies. Attitude similarity produced greater increments in attraction for political out-group members but not for targets with a stigmatic sexual orientation or personality characteristic.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1