Title: Individual Differences and Prejudice: Is There a Prejudiced Personality
1- Individual Differences and Prejudice Is There a
Prejudiced Personality?
2The Big 3 Authoritarianism, Social Dominance
Orientation, and Empathy
- The Big 3 are the individual difference
variables most closely associated with prejudice. - Authoritarianism and social dominance resemble
ideologies. - Empathy reflects a personality variable.
3Authoritarianism
- Authoritarian personality
- A personality type that is especially susceptible
to unthinking obedience to authority. - Characteristic patterns include
- Conventionalism
- Authoritarian submission
- Authoritarian aggression
- Stereotypy
- Projectivity
4Authoritarianism
- Right-wing authoritarianism (RWA) - set of
attitudes in three clusters - Authoritarian submission
- Authoritarian aggression
- Conventionalism
- Prejudiced against a wide variety of groups,
especially those that authority figures condemn
and that are perceived to violate traditional
values.
5Authoritarianism
- Personal characteristics of people high in RWA
that may predispose them to prejudice - Mentally inflexible
- Disinterest in experiencing new things
- Perception of the world as a dangerous place
- Tendency to organize their worldviews in terms of
ingroups and outgroups
6Social Dominance Orientation
- Social Dominance Orientation (SDO) - desires that
ones ingroup dominate and be superior to
outgroups. - Two components
- Group-based dominance
- Opposition to equality
7Social Dominance Orientation
- People high in SDO prefer a society in which
social groups are unequal and their group holds
the superior position. - People who hold more power in society exhibit
higher levels of social dominance orientation. - Social power causes people to develop social
dominance attitudes.
8Social Dominance Orientation and Prejudice
- People high in SDO are prejudiced against members
of groups that challenge the legitimacy of social
inequality. - Personal characteristics that may predispose
people high in SDO to prejudice - Seeing the world in competitive terms
- Belief that other groups successes necessarily
come at their ingroups expense - Low empathy
- Tough-minded
9Social Dominance Orientation and Prejudice
- Legitimizing myths are important here.
- Group stereotypes are legitimizing myths that can
be used to justify denying equality to other
groups. - SDO versus RWA
10Empathy and Prejudice
- An other-oriented response congruent with
anothers perceived welfare. - Four components of empathy
- Perspective taking
- Empathic concern
- Personal distress
- Fantasy
- More empathic people exhibit less prejudice.
11Self-Esteem and Prejudice
- Self-enhancement
- People who are low in self-esteem may use
prejudice to boost their self-images by looking
down on others. - High self-esteem seems to be linked to prejudice.
- Self-protection
- People may respond to threats to self-esteem with
prejudice to reduce the effects of the threat and
feel better about oneself. - Research supports this idea.
12Intergroup Anxiety and Prejudice
- Intergroup Anxiety feelings of discomfort
experienced when interacting with members of
other groups. - Negative expectations for the interaction exist
for one of two reasons - Little contact with the outgroup
- Negative experiences with members of the outgroup
in the past - Research has shown strong support for the
relationship between intergroup anxiety and
prejudice.
13Individualism and Prejudice
- Individualism emphasizes self-reliance and
independence from others - Protestant work ethic emphasizes importance of
hard work and perseverance as the way to success
in life. - Groups that are stereotyped as violating the
principles of individualism are viewed negatively
by those who adhere to these principles.
14Egalitarianism and Prejudice
- Egalitarianism emphasizes equal opportunity,
equal treatment for all people, and concern for
others well-being - Egalitarianism may inhibit prejudice, working to
counteract all forms of prejudice. - Research has found that greater endorsement of
egalitarian values was associated with less
prejudice.
15Religion and Prejudice
- Some forms of religiosity are positively
correlated with prejudice and other forms of
religiosity are negatively correlated with
prejudice. - Religious Involvement
- Research has found that religious involvement is
consistently correlated with a variety of forms
of prejudice.
16Intrinsic and Extrinsic Religious Orientation
- Intrinsic religious orientation truly believe in
religious teachings and try to live life
according to them - Small negative correlation with prejudice
- Extrinsic religious orientation use religion to
achieve nonreligious goals and thus to provide
security, sociability, status, etc. - Small positive correlation with prejudice
17Quest Orientation
- Quest view of religiosity as a search for
answers to questions about the meaning of life - Reflects an open-mindedness and willingness to
change. - Hypothesized to be negatively correlated with
prejudice supported by research. - More strongly related to prejudice than either
intrinsic or extrinsic orientation.
18Religious Fundamentalism
- Belief that there is one set of religious
teachings that clearly contain the fundamental
truth about humanity and a deity and that those
who believe and follow these fundamental
teachings have a special relationship with the
deity. - It is consistently associated with prejudice.
19Political Orientation and Prejudice
- Very controversial topic in psychology of
prejudice - Research has consistently found a correlation
between endorsement of conservative political
beliefs and prejudice. - Symbolic prejudice approach has been criticized.
20Conservatism and Prejudice
- Why is there a relationships between conservatism
and prejudice? - Two principal explanations
- 1. Endorsement of conservative beliefs is
correlated with both SDO and RWA, which are
themselves related to prejudice. - Social dominance theory suggests that prejudice
is caused by SDO and RWA rather than a
conservative belief system. - Conservatism does not cause prejudice rather,
some prejudiced people use the conservative
belief system as a means of justifying their
prejudices.
21Conservatism and Prejudice
- 2. Attribution-value model of prejudice explain
that conservatives are more likely than liberals
to see people as being responsible for negative
outcomes they experience. - They are more likely to be prejudiced because
they are more likely to perceive others as
violating an important social value and dislike
them for it.
22Liberalism and Prejudice
- Liberals can be prejudiced as well.
- Liberals exhibit aversive prejudice whereas
conservatives exhibit modern-symbolic prejudice.