Reducing Automatic Stereotype Activation: Mechanisms and Moderators of Situational Attribution Training

Individuals tend to underestimate situational causes and overly rely on trait causes in explaining negative behaviors of outgroup members, a tendency named the ultimate attribution error (Pettigrew, 1979). This attributional pattern is directly related to stereotyping, because attributing negative b...

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Main Author: Latu, Ioana M.
Format: Others
Published: Digital Archive @ GSU 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/psych_diss/72
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1073&context=psych_diss
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spelling ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-digitalarchive.gsu.edu-psych_diss-10732013-04-23T03:24:25Z Reducing Automatic Stereotype Activation: Mechanisms and Moderators of Situational Attribution Training Latu, Ioana M. Individuals tend to underestimate situational causes and overly rely on trait causes in explaining negative behaviors of outgroup members, a tendency named the ultimate attribution error (Pettigrew, 1979). This attributional pattern is directly related to stereotyping, because attributing negative behaviors to internal, stable causes tends to perpetuate negative stereotypes of outgroup members. Recent research on implicit bias reduction revealed that circumventing individuals’ tendency to engage in the ultimate attribution error led to reduced stereotyping. More specifically, training White participants to consider situational factors in determining Blacks’ negative stereotypic behaviors led to decreased automatic stereotype activation. This technique was named Situational Attribution Training (Stewart, Latu, Kawakami, & Myers, 2010). In the current studies, I investigated the mechanisms and moderators of Situational Attribution Training. In Study 1, I investigated the effect of training on spontaneous situational inferences. Findings revealed that training did not increase spontaneous situational inferences: both training and control participants showed evidence of spontaneous situational inferences. In Study 2, I investigated whether correcting trait inferences by taking into account situational factors has become automatic after training. In addition, explicit prejudice, motivations to control prejudice, and cognitive complexity variables (need for cognition, personal need for structure) were investigated as moderators of training success. These findings revealed that Situational Attribution Training works best for individuals high in need for cognition, under conditions of no cognitive load, but not high cognitive load. Training increased implicit bias for individuals high in modern racism, regardless of their cognitive load. Possible explanations of these findings were discussed, including methodological limitations and theoretical implications. 2010-08-18 text application/pdf http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/psych_diss/72 http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1073&context=psych_diss Psychology Dissertations Digital Archive @ GSU Stereotyping Stereotype reduction Automaticity Individual differences Psychology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Stereotyping
Stereotype reduction
Automaticity
Individual differences
Psychology
spellingShingle Stereotyping
Stereotype reduction
Automaticity
Individual differences
Psychology
Latu, Ioana M.
Reducing Automatic Stereotype Activation: Mechanisms and Moderators of Situational Attribution Training
description Individuals tend to underestimate situational causes and overly rely on trait causes in explaining negative behaviors of outgroup members, a tendency named the ultimate attribution error (Pettigrew, 1979). This attributional pattern is directly related to stereotyping, because attributing negative behaviors to internal, stable causes tends to perpetuate negative stereotypes of outgroup members. Recent research on implicit bias reduction revealed that circumventing individuals’ tendency to engage in the ultimate attribution error led to reduced stereotyping. More specifically, training White participants to consider situational factors in determining Blacks’ negative stereotypic behaviors led to decreased automatic stereotype activation. This technique was named Situational Attribution Training (Stewart, Latu, Kawakami, & Myers, 2010). In the current studies, I investigated the mechanisms and moderators of Situational Attribution Training. In Study 1, I investigated the effect of training on spontaneous situational inferences. Findings revealed that training did not increase spontaneous situational inferences: both training and control participants showed evidence of spontaneous situational inferences. In Study 2, I investigated whether correcting trait inferences by taking into account situational factors has become automatic after training. In addition, explicit prejudice, motivations to control prejudice, and cognitive complexity variables (need for cognition, personal need for structure) were investigated as moderators of training success. These findings revealed that Situational Attribution Training works best for individuals high in need for cognition, under conditions of no cognitive load, but not high cognitive load. Training increased implicit bias for individuals high in modern racism, regardless of their cognitive load. Possible explanations of these findings were discussed, including methodological limitations and theoretical implications.
author Latu, Ioana M.
author_facet Latu, Ioana M.
author_sort Latu, Ioana M.
title Reducing Automatic Stereotype Activation: Mechanisms and Moderators of Situational Attribution Training
title_short Reducing Automatic Stereotype Activation: Mechanisms and Moderators of Situational Attribution Training
title_full Reducing Automatic Stereotype Activation: Mechanisms and Moderators of Situational Attribution Training
title_fullStr Reducing Automatic Stereotype Activation: Mechanisms and Moderators of Situational Attribution Training
title_full_unstemmed Reducing Automatic Stereotype Activation: Mechanisms and Moderators of Situational Attribution Training
title_sort reducing automatic stereotype activation: mechanisms and moderators of situational attribution training
publisher Digital Archive @ GSU
publishDate 2010
url http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/psych_diss/72
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1073&context=psych_diss
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