| Literature DB >> 12002956 |
Teri J Elkins1, James S Phillips, Robert Konopaske.
Abstract
Hypotheses derived from defensive attribution theory and social identity theory were tested in 3 laboratory experiments examining the effects of plaintiff and observer gender on perceived threat, plaintiff identification, and sex discrimination. In Study 1, women differentiated plaintiffs on the basis of gender, whereas men did not. Study 2 showed that this bias occurred because employment discrimination was personally threatening to women but not to men. In Study 3, the bias was reversed in a child custody context. As predicted, men found this context to be significantly more threatening than did women and subsequently exhibited a similarity bias. Mediation analyses suggested that responsibility attributions explained most of the variance in discrimination judgments associated with the plaintiff gender by observer gender interactions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12002956 DOI: 10.1037/0021-9010.87.2.280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Psychol ISSN: 0021-9010