| Literature DB >> 18605181 |
Nicoletta Cavazza1, Angelica Mucchi-Faina.
Abstract
Research has shown that people perceive others as more vulnerable than themselves to media communication, and their political out-group as more vulnerable than their political in-group. In the present study, the authors predicted that the same two biases would appear with respect to another kind of influence--conformity--but that participants' judgments would display a different pattern according to their political orientations. Right-wing and left-wing university students were asked to evaluate conformity and to estimate how conformist they, their political in-group, their political out-group, and other groups are. As hypothesized, right-wingers expressed more ambivalence toward conformity and viewed it less negatively than did left-wingers. Political orientation had no impact on the discrepancy between self and others, but it did moderate the in-group-out-group discrepancy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18605181 DOI: 10.3200/SOCP.148.3.335-346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Soc Psychol ISSN: 0022-4545