Deck 6: Prejudice

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Question
Prejudice refers to negative ________ by members of an ingroup toward members of an outgroup.

A) beliefs
B) feelings
C) behaviors
D) all of the above
Use Space or
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Question
Bill believes that all fraternity members are snobs. Bill is engaging in

A) discrimination
B) scapegoating
C) ego-defensive behavior
D) stereotyping
Question
Most research on the effects of stereotypes has emphasized how they

A) affect the targets of the stereotypes
B) result in greater intergroup harmony
C) bias and distort the stereotype holder's judgment
D) result from a particular set of personality traits
Question
Stereotypes about members of an outgroup can sometimes produce stereotype-confirming behavior on the part of the outgroup members. This is known as

A) ethnocentrism
B) a self-fulfilling prophecy
C) the assumed similarity effect
D) the typicality effect
Question
The anxiety that comes from an awareness that one's behavior may confirm other people's stereotypes is referred to as

A) ethnocentrism
B) relative deprivation
C) stereotype threat
D) group-based fear
Question
When the victim of stereotype threat disengages his or her self-esteem from the domain of performance in question, this is called

A) the outgroup homogeneity effect
B) optimal distinctiveness
C) reverse discrimination
D) disidentification
Question
The belief that the ingroup is the center of everything and is superior to all outgroups is known as

A) discrimination
B) prejudice
C) ethnocentrism
D) the typicality effect
Question
Sheri believes that her sorority is superior to all of the others and is the most prominent sorority on campus. A social psychologist would say that Sheri is exhibiting

A) ethnocentrism
B) discrimination
C) rationalization
D) prejudice
Question
In a study of the effects of prejudice, Munro and Ditto (1997) asked participants to read two different articles, one concluding that homosexuality was associated with psychopathology and the other concluding that it was not. Participants who were more prejudiced against homosexuals

A) were less certain about their views after reading the articles
B) were more convinced by the less derogatory report
C) were less influenced by the articles than those who were less prejudiced
D) responded more favorably to the more derogatory report
Question
Discrimination that favors the minority group at the expense of the majority is known as

A) old-fashioned racism
B) aversive racism
C) relative deprivation
D) reverse discrimination
Question
Sometimes a person does not know whether they are being discriminated against because of their group membership or because of something negative about their performance. This is known as

A) group-serving bias
B) attributional ambiguity
C) illusory correlation
D) outgroup homogeneity effect
Question
Research on socialization of prejudice suggests that racial prejudice is usually well established and resistant to change by

A) ages 2-4
B) early adolescence
C) young adulthood
D) middle age
Question
The idea that prejudice is learned through social norms and through the media is consistent with

A) psychodynamic theories
B) realistic group conflict theory
C) categorization theories
D) social learning theory
Question
How does the media play a role in reinforcing stereotypes about African Americans?

A) by depicting disproportionate numbers of poor people as black
B) by linking blacks to violent crime
C) by depicting blacks in stereotypical roles
D) all of the above
Question
Which of the following is NOT an example of a motivational approach to prejudice?

A) realistic group conflict
B) authoritarian personality
C) displaced aggression
D) all of the above are psychodynamic approaches
Question
A white man is given an expensive traffic ticket by a black police officer. As a result, the man fires all of his black employees. The man's behavior can best be explained by which type of theory?

A) social learning theory
B) psychodynamic
C) realistic group conflict
D) cognitive
Question
Right wing authoritarianism is associated with hostility toward which of the following groups?

A) drug users
B) environmentalists
C) AIDS victims
D) all of the above
Question
Pat has an exaggerated need to submit to authority and feels that members of minority groups and social deviants should be punished. Pat would be characterized as

A) high in aversive racism
B) high in old-fashioned racism
C) an authoritarian personality
D) a victim of relative deprivation
Question
The view that prejudice is an inevitable consequence of competition among groups for resources or power is known as

A) social dominance theory
B) category-based processing
C) aversive racism
D) realistic group conflict theory
Question
Realistic group conflict theory argues that racism is due to

A) personality characteristics that encourage prejudice, such as authoritarianism
B) competition between groups for scarce resources
C) clashes between the motives of the ingroup and the outgroup
D) cognitive biases that promote categorization and subtyping
Question
According to intergroup competition theories, which of the following is a way that groups maintain their privileged position?

A) optimal distinctiveness
B) cooperative interdependence
C) by emphasizing cross-cutting categories
D) by creating legitimizing myths
Question
If we tend to think of older people in terms of categories such as "senior citizens,""grandparents,"And "elder statesmen,"Then we are

A) stereotyping
B) subtyping
C) discriminating
D) using group-serving biases
Question
David meets Sondra, a black mother on welfare who is working very hard to finish a college program to get a good job. Sondra tells David that she is also working 30 hours per week to support her children while in school. David holds a very negative stereotype of black mothers on welfare, but meeting Sondra contradicts it. David may create a __________ of "hardworking black mothers on welfare who are trying to get off welfare" because of this meeting.

A) false memory
B) subtype
C) group-serving bias
D) aversive racist belief
Question
Which statement about automatic priming is TRUE?

A) Priming is more cognitive than affective.
B) Once primed, stereotypes become more believable.
C) Even though priming happens quickly, most people are aware of it.
D) Only the actual presence of a group member can prime a stereotype.
Question
The label attached to a category is critical to category-based processing because

A) categories without labels tend to be processed more quickly
B) the absence of a label results in attribute-based processing
C) different labels can evoke very different evaluations
D) all of the above
Question
Stereotypes are particularly likely to override any information about a person when the person closely resembles the stereotype. This is known as

A) the outgroup homogeneity effect
B) the assumed similarity effect
C) illusory correlation
D) the typicality effect
Question
Lord and colleagues (1984) asked subjects whether they would host a gay prospective student. The researchers found that subjects were most willing to help when

A) the student was similar to them
B) the student fit the stereotype of a "typical" gay man
C) they were high in authoritarianism
D) they were given very little time to make the decision
Question
When are stereotypes most likely to be used?

A) when an individual's behavior is ambiguous
B) when a stereotype has been primed
C) when an individual is seen as "typical" of the stereotyped group
D) all of the above
Question
Which of the following is NOT a basis for categorization of people into groups?

A) salience
B) self-esteem
C) social norms
D) subtyping
Question
If we believe that football players are not very intelligent, what will we do with the Information that Joe got an A- on his midterm?

A) We will maintain the stereotype.
B) We will see Joe as an exception to the stereotype.
C) We will change the stereotype.
D) none of the above
Question
Which of the following is an advantage of category-based processing?

A) It allows for more thorough cognitive processing.
B) It elicits more positive evaluations.
C) It allows us to go beyond the information we are given.
D) It inhibits the formation of prejudices.
Question
Macrae, Stangor and Milne (1994) asked students to list their thoughts about a "child abuser," And then to locate various personality trait words in a puzzle. The researchers found that

A) the emotion associated with thinking about a child abuser slowed reaction times
B) students were unable to find words associated with child abusers
C) students found more words that were consistent with the category than were inconsistent
D) students had difficulty accessing a stereotype of a child abuser
Question
Once people feel they belong to a group, they tend to favor fellow group members at the expense of members of other groups. This is known as

A) the typicality effect
B) the assumed similarity effect
C) relative deprivation
D) the ingroup favoritism effect
Question
Group-serving biases are based on the

A) beliefs we have about what group members are typically like
B) attributions we make for a group's successes and failures
C) feelings of animosity and hostility we have toward a group
D) use of the availability heuristic when judging members of an outgroup
Question
Research shows that men attribute women's success in math or science to luck or the ease of the task, whereas they attribute men's success to skill. This is evidence of

A) old-fashioned racism
B) the outgroup homogeneity effect
C) realistic group conflict
D) group-serving biases
Question
The assumed similarity effect refers to the tendency of ingroup members to perceive

A) outgroup members as similar to each other
B) outgroup members as similar to ingroup members
C) ingroup members as more similar to themselves than to outgroup members
D) ingroup members as more similar to each other than to themselves
Question
"They are all alike, whereas we are quite diverse,"Is a statement reflecting the

A) typicality effect
B) outgroup homogeneity effect
C) assumed similarity effect
D) ingroup favoritism effect
Question
Which statement regarding the outgroup homogeneity effect is TRUE?

A) We are more likely to see subcategories within the outgroup than in our own group.
B) It occurs when individuals have approximately equal amounts of experience with members of both groups.
C) The effect only occurs for groups based on visible characteristics, such as race.
D) all of the above are true
Question
Which is NOT an assumption of social identity theory?

A) People are motivated to achieve through feelings of competition with outgroup members.
B) People derive a sense of self-esteem from their social identity as members of an
Ingroup.
C) People's self-concepts are partly dependent on how they evaluate the ingroup
Relative to other groups.
D) People categorize the world into ingroups and outgroups.
Question
According to optimal distinctiveness theory, which social identity will best satisfy a person's needs?

A) thinking of one's self as a human being
B) thinking of one's self as a member of one's immediate family
C) thinking of one's self as an artist
D) thinking of one's self as a member of a particular fraternity or sorority
Question
The collective self refers to

A) the construction of the self in collectivist cultures
B) the aspect of the self that is dependent upon ingroup membership
C) the sum total of all an individual's social roles
D) the aspect of the self that focuses on nurturance and cooperation
Question
A comparison of different approaches to the study of prejudice indicates that

A) social learning theory is the best supported by research
B) motivational approaches appear to apply only in a limited set of social contexts
C) cognitive approaches have demonstrated the lack of cultural differences in how prejudice is defined and expressed
D) all of the theories explain some aspects of prejudice
Question
Clyde is a white supremacist who advocates complete racial segregation and discrimination against blacks in employment and education. This demonstrates

A) old-fashioned racism
B) ambivalent racism
C) symbolic racism
D) realistic group conflict
Question
Surveys have shown that

A) the majority of whites still endorse old-fashioned racism
B) the main supporters of old-fashioned racism are older whites
C) old-fashioned racism is expressed equally among educated and uneducated
Groups
D) the majority of whites are actively in favor of affirmative action and busing
Question
Evidence for continuing resistance to full racial equality is found in the fact that

A) a small percentage of whites still want separation of the races
B) African Americans are less convinced than whites that prejudice is diminishing
C) whites give only weak support to government action to promote racial equality
D) all of the above
Question
Research on symbolic racism has shown that

A) symbolic racism is correlated with old-fashioned racism
B) symbolic racism is a better predictor of white opposition to affirmative action
Than is old-fashioned racism
C) the symbolic racism approach is useful for understanding prejudice against
Women and homosexuals as well as blacks
D) all of the above
Question
People who believe in racial equality and who simultaneously hold negative feelings toward blacks can be described as

A) aversive racists
B) symbolic racists
C) old-fashioned racists
D) racial liberals
Question
Researchers have asked subjects to complete a lexical decision task in which subjects are presented with pairs of words and are asked to indicate whether both are real words. Results showing that white subjects respond more quickly to pairs like "white-smart" than pairs like "black-smart" are evidence of

A) stereotype threat
B) illusory correlation
C) relative deprivation
D) implicit stereotypes
Question
According to research, implicit stereotypes are most strongly associated with behaviors such as

A) avoidance of eye contact with a black interviewer
B) ratings of a black defendant's guilt
C) relative evaluations of white and black interviewers
D) all of the above
Question
Which is NOT a component of the contact theory of prejudice reduction?

A) sustained close contact
B) unconditional positive regard for others
C) equal status
D) cooperative interdependence
Question
Mrs. Jones structures her 2nd grade classroom so that students are responsible for teaching material to others and cooperation and interdependence are fostered. This is known as

A) the jigsaw technique
B) recategorizing
C) the minimal intergroup situation
D) relative deprivation
Question
Prejudice refers to negative beliefs about the typical characteristics of a member of an outgroup.
Question
A shopkeeper who refuses to hire Koreans is guilty of discrimination.
Question
Stereotypes can be harmful because they can result in self-fulfilling prophecies.
Question
Victims of stereotype threat may come to devalue performance in the domain in question.
Question
Ethnocentrism is the belief that all ingroup members are different, whereas all outgroup members are alike.
Question
People have a tendency to evaluate the attributes of outgroups more favorably than those of members of their own group.
Question
Discrimination is emotionally difficult for victims because it often involves attributional ambiguity.
Question
If someone is prejudiced, they will always discriminate.
Question
Cognitive approaches to prejudice emphasize the role of social norms and the media.
Question
The authoritarian personality is a psychodynamic approach to prejudice.
Question
Relative deprivation can cause antagonism even when a group's actual situation is improving.
Question
Salient stimuli are more likely to promote categorization than non-salient stimuli.
Question
A category label usually does not have an evaluation associated with it.
Question
Category-based processing is more an affective process than a cognitive one.
Question
People react in a more stereotyped way to people who are considered "atypical"of their group.
Question
Category-based processing can generate false memories.
Question
Ingroup favoritism refers to the tendency to reward ingroup members at the expense of outgroup members.
Question
People make internal attributions for an ingroup's successes and external attributions for its failures.
Question
Social identity theory argues that prejudice arises when groups must compete for scarce resources.
Question
Old-fashioned racism has declined substantially in recent decades.
Question
The symbolic racism approach has been found to be helpful for explaining prejudice against blacks, but not against other minority groups.
Question
Symbolic racism is a stronger predictor than old-fashioned racism of white opposition to black political leaders and affirmative action.
Question
Realistic group conflict theory refers to the mixture of belief in equality with negative feelings toward blacks.
Question
Decreases in prejudice are due in part to the fact that the targets of some prejudices have changed and no longer fit older stereotypes about them.
Question
According to contact theory, contact between groups must be sustained, close, and of equal status to promote the reduction of prejudice.
Question
Contact theory argues that any kind of contact, no matter how brief, between individuals of different groups will most likely result in the reduction of prejudice.
Question
Stereotypes are beliefs, whereas discrimination involves ________.
Question
________ refers to the belief that the ingroup is the center of everything and is superior to all outgroups.
Question
Children acquire prejudice by learning the social norms of their surroundings, a process called ________.
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Deck 6: Prejudice
1
Prejudice refers to negative ________ by members of an ingroup toward members of an outgroup.

A) beliefs
B) feelings
C) behaviors
D) all of the above
feelings
2
Bill believes that all fraternity members are snobs. Bill is engaging in

A) discrimination
B) scapegoating
C) ego-defensive behavior
D) stereotyping
stereotyping
3
Most research on the effects of stereotypes has emphasized how they

A) affect the targets of the stereotypes
B) result in greater intergroup harmony
C) bias and distort the stereotype holder's judgment
D) result from a particular set of personality traits
bias and distort the stereotype holder's judgment
4
Stereotypes about members of an outgroup can sometimes produce stereotype-confirming behavior on the part of the outgroup members. This is known as

A) ethnocentrism
B) a self-fulfilling prophecy
C) the assumed similarity effect
D) the typicality effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The anxiety that comes from an awareness that one's behavior may confirm other people's stereotypes is referred to as

A) ethnocentrism
B) relative deprivation
C) stereotype threat
D) group-based fear
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
When the victim of stereotype threat disengages his or her self-esteem from the domain of performance in question, this is called

A) the outgroup homogeneity effect
B) optimal distinctiveness
C) reverse discrimination
D) disidentification
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The belief that the ingroup is the center of everything and is superior to all outgroups is known as

A) discrimination
B) prejudice
C) ethnocentrism
D) the typicality effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Sheri believes that her sorority is superior to all of the others and is the most prominent sorority on campus. A social psychologist would say that Sheri is exhibiting

A) ethnocentrism
B) discrimination
C) rationalization
D) prejudice
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
In a study of the effects of prejudice, Munro and Ditto (1997) asked participants to read two different articles, one concluding that homosexuality was associated with psychopathology and the other concluding that it was not. Participants who were more prejudiced against homosexuals

A) were less certain about their views after reading the articles
B) were more convinced by the less derogatory report
C) were less influenced by the articles than those who were less prejudiced
D) responded more favorably to the more derogatory report
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Discrimination that favors the minority group at the expense of the majority is known as

A) old-fashioned racism
B) aversive racism
C) relative deprivation
D) reverse discrimination
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Sometimes a person does not know whether they are being discriminated against because of their group membership or because of something negative about their performance. This is known as

A) group-serving bias
B) attributional ambiguity
C) illusory correlation
D) outgroup homogeneity effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Research on socialization of prejudice suggests that racial prejudice is usually well established and resistant to change by

A) ages 2-4
B) early adolescence
C) young adulthood
D) middle age
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The idea that prejudice is learned through social norms and through the media is consistent with

A) psychodynamic theories
B) realistic group conflict theory
C) categorization theories
D) social learning theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
How does the media play a role in reinforcing stereotypes about African Americans?

A) by depicting disproportionate numbers of poor people as black
B) by linking blacks to violent crime
C) by depicting blacks in stereotypical roles
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which of the following is NOT an example of a motivational approach to prejudice?

A) realistic group conflict
B) authoritarian personality
C) displaced aggression
D) all of the above are psychodynamic approaches
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
A white man is given an expensive traffic ticket by a black police officer. As a result, the man fires all of his black employees. The man's behavior can best be explained by which type of theory?

A) social learning theory
B) psychodynamic
C) realistic group conflict
D) cognitive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Right wing authoritarianism is associated with hostility toward which of the following groups?

A) drug users
B) environmentalists
C) AIDS victims
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Pat has an exaggerated need to submit to authority and feels that members of minority groups and social deviants should be punished. Pat would be characterized as

A) high in aversive racism
B) high in old-fashioned racism
C) an authoritarian personality
D) a victim of relative deprivation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The view that prejudice is an inevitable consequence of competition among groups for resources or power is known as

A) social dominance theory
B) category-based processing
C) aversive racism
D) realistic group conflict theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Realistic group conflict theory argues that racism is due to

A) personality characteristics that encourage prejudice, such as authoritarianism
B) competition between groups for scarce resources
C) clashes between the motives of the ingroup and the outgroup
D) cognitive biases that promote categorization and subtyping
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
According to intergroup competition theories, which of the following is a way that groups maintain their privileged position?

A) optimal distinctiveness
B) cooperative interdependence
C) by emphasizing cross-cutting categories
D) by creating legitimizing myths
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
If we tend to think of older people in terms of categories such as "senior citizens,""grandparents,"And "elder statesmen,"Then we are

A) stereotyping
B) subtyping
C) discriminating
D) using group-serving biases
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
David meets Sondra, a black mother on welfare who is working very hard to finish a college program to get a good job. Sondra tells David that she is also working 30 hours per week to support her children while in school. David holds a very negative stereotype of black mothers on welfare, but meeting Sondra contradicts it. David may create a __________ of "hardworking black mothers on welfare who are trying to get off welfare" because of this meeting.

A) false memory
B) subtype
C) group-serving bias
D) aversive racist belief
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which statement about automatic priming is TRUE?

A) Priming is more cognitive than affective.
B) Once primed, stereotypes become more believable.
C) Even though priming happens quickly, most people are aware of it.
D) Only the actual presence of a group member can prime a stereotype.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The label attached to a category is critical to category-based processing because

A) categories without labels tend to be processed more quickly
B) the absence of a label results in attribute-based processing
C) different labels can evoke very different evaluations
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Stereotypes are particularly likely to override any information about a person when the person closely resembles the stereotype. This is known as

A) the outgroup homogeneity effect
B) the assumed similarity effect
C) illusory correlation
D) the typicality effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Lord and colleagues (1984) asked subjects whether they would host a gay prospective student. The researchers found that subjects were most willing to help when

A) the student was similar to them
B) the student fit the stereotype of a "typical" gay man
C) they were high in authoritarianism
D) they were given very little time to make the decision
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
When are stereotypes most likely to be used?

A) when an individual's behavior is ambiguous
B) when a stereotype has been primed
C) when an individual is seen as "typical" of the stereotyped group
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Which of the following is NOT a basis for categorization of people into groups?

A) salience
B) self-esteem
C) social norms
D) subtyping
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
If we believe that football players are not very intelligent, what will we do with the Information that Joe got an A- on his midterm?

A) We will maintain the stereotype.
B) We will see Joe as an exception to the stereotype.
C) We will change the stereotype.
D) none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Which of the following is an advantage of category-based processing?

A) It allows for more thorough cognitive processing.
B) It elicits more positive evaluations.
C) It allows us to go beyond the information we are given.
D) It inhibits the formation of prejudices.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Macrae, Stangor and Milne (1994) asked students to list their thoughts about a "child abuser," And then to locate various personality trait words in a puzzle. The researchers found that

A) the emotion associated with thinking about a child abuser slowed reaction times
B) students were unable to find words associated with child abusers
C) students found more words that were consistent with the category than were inconsistent
D) students had difficulty accessing a stereotype of a child abuser
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Once people feel they belong to a group, they tend to favor fellow group members at the expense of members of other groups. This is known as

A) the typicality effect
B) the assumed similarity effect
C) relative deprivation
D) the ingroup favoritism effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Group-serving biases are based on the

A) beliefs we have about what group members are typically like
B) attributions we make for a group's successes and failures
C) feelings of animosity and hostility we have toward a group
D) use of the availability heuristic when judging members of an outgroup
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Research shows that men attribute women's success in math or science to luck or the ease of the task, whereas they attribute men's success to skill. This is evidence of

A) old-fashioned racism
B) the outgroup homogeneity effect
C) realistic group conflict
D) group-serving biases
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The assumed similarity effect refers to the tendency of ingroup members to perceive

A) outgroup members as similar to each other
B) outgroup members as similar to ingroup members
C) ingroup members as more similar to themselves than to outgroup members
D) ingroup members as more similar to each other than to themselves
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
"They are all alike, whereas we are quite diverse,"Is a statement reflecting the

A) typicality effect
B) outgroup homogeneity effect
C) assumed similarity effect
D) ingroup favoritism effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Which statement regarding the outgroup homogeneity effect is TRUE?

A) We are more likely to see subcategories within the outgroup than in our own group.
B) It occurs when individuals have approximately equal amounts of experience with members of both groups.
C) The effect only occurs for groups based on visible characteristics, such as race.
D) all of the above are true
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Which is NOT an assumption of social identity theory?

A) People are motivated to achieve through feelings of competition with outgroup members.
B) People derive a sense of self-esteem from their social identity as members of an
Ingroup.
C) People's self-concepts are partly dependent on how they evaluate the ingroup
Relative to other groups.
D) People categorize the world into ingroups and outgroups.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
According to optimal distinctiveness theory, which social identity will best satisfy a person's needs?

A) thinking of one's self as a human being
B) thinking of one's self as a member of one's immediate family
C) thinking of one's self as an artist
D) thinking of one's self as a member of a particular fraternity or sorority
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The collective self refers to

A) the construction of the self in collectivist cultures
B) the aspect of the self that is dependent upon ingroup membership
C) the sum total of all an individual's social roles
D) the aspect of the self that focuses on nurturance and cooperation
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42
A comparison of different approaches to the study of prejudice indicates that

A) social learning theory is the best supported by research
B) motivational approaches appear to apply only in a limited set of social contexts
C) cognitive approaches have demonstrated the lack of cultural differences in how prejudice is defined and expressed
D) all of the theories explain some aspects of prejudice
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43
Clyde is a white supremacist who advocates complete racial segregation and discrimination against blacks in employment and education. This demonstrates

A) old-fashioned racism
B) ambivalent racism
C) symbolic racism
D) realistic group conflict
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44
Surveys have shown that

A) the majority of whites still endorse old-fashioned racism
B) the main supporters of old-fashioned racism are older whites
C) old-fashioned racism is expressed equally among educated and uneducated
Groups
D) the majority of whites are actively in favor of affirmative action and busing
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45
Evidence for continuing resistance to full racial equality is found in the fact that

A) a small percentage of whites still want separation of the races
B) African Americans are less convinced than whites that prejudice is diminishing
C) whites give only weak support to government action to promote racial equality
D) all of the above
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46
Research on symbolic racism has shown that

A) symbolic racism is correlated with old-fashioned racism
B) symbolic racism is a better predictor of white opposition to affirmative action
Than is old-fashioned racism
C) the symbolic racism approach is useful for understanding prejudice against
Women and homosexuals as well as blacks
D) all of the above
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47
People who believe in racial equality and who simultaneously hold negative feelings toward blacks can be described as

A) aversive racists
B) symbolic racists
C) old-fashioned racists
D) racial liberals
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48
Researchers have asked subjects to complete a lexical decision task in which subjects are presented with pairs of words and are asked to indicate whether both are real words. Results showing that white subjects respond more quickly to pairs like "white-smart" than pairs like "black-smart" are evidence of

A) stereotype threat
B) illusory correlation
C) relative deprivation
D) implicit stereotypes
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49
According to research, implicit stereotypes are most strongly associated with behaviors such as

A) avoidance of eye contact with a black interviewer
B) ratings of a black defendant's guilt
C) relative evaluations of white and black interviewers
D) all of the above
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50
Which is NOT a component of the contact theory of prejudice reduction?

A) sustained close contact
B) unconditional positive regard for others
C) equal status
D) cooperative interdependence
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51
Mrs. Jones structures her 2nd grade classroom so that students are responsible for teaching material to others and cooperation and interdependence are fostered. This is known as

A) the jigsaw technique
B) recategorizing
C) the minimal intergroup situation
D) relative deprivation
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52
Prejudice refers to negative beliefs about the typical characteristics of a member of an outgroup.
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53
A shopkeeper who refuses to hire Koreans is guilty of discrimination.
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54
Stereotypes can be harmful because they can result in self-fulfilling prophecies.
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55
Victims of stereotype threat may come to devalue performance in the domain in question.
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56
Ethnocentrism is the belief that all ingroup members are different, whereas all outgroup members are alike.
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57
People have a tendency to evaluate the attributes of outgroups more favorably than those of members of their own group.
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58
Discrimination is emotionally difficult for victims because it often involves attributional ambiguity.
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59
If someone is prejudiced, they will always discriminate.
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60
Cognitive approaches to prejudice emphasize the role of social norms and the media.
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61
The authoritarian personality is a psychodynamic approach to prejudice.
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62
Relative deprivation can cause antagonism even when a group's actual situation is improving.
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63
Salient stimuli are more likely to promote categorization than non-salient stimuli.
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64
A category label usually does not have an evaluation associated with it.
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65
Category-based processing is more an affective process than a cognitive one.
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66
People react in a more stereotyped way to people who are considered "atypical"of their group.
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67
Category-based processing can generate false memories.
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68
Ingroup favoritism refers to the tendency to reward ingroup members at the expense of outgroup members.
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69
People make internal attributions for an ingroup's successes and external attributions for its failures.
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70
Social identity theory argues that prejudice arises when groups must compete for scarce resources.
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71
Old-fashioned racism has declined substantially in recent decades.
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72
The symbolic racism approach has been found to be helpful for explaining prejudice against blacks, but not against other minority groups.
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73
Symbolic racism is a stronger predictor than old-fashioned racism of white opposition to black political leaders and affirmative action.
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74
Realistic group conflict theory refers to the mixture of belief in equality with negative feelings toward blacks.
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75
Decreases in prejudice are due in part to the fact that the targets of some prejudices have changed and no longer fit older stereotypes about them.
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76
According to contact theory, contact between groups must be sustained, close, and of equal status to promote the reduction of prejudice.
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77
Contact theory argues that any kind of contact, no matter how brief, between individuals of different groups will most likely result in the reduction of prejudice.
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78
Stereotypes are beliefs, whereas discrimination involves ________.
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79
________ refers to the belief that the ingroup is the center of everything and is superior to all outgroups.
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80
Children acquire prejudice by learning the social norms of their surroundings, a process called ________.
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