| Literature DB >> 23558550 |
Yarrow Dunham1, Eva E Chen, Mahzarin R Banaji.
Abstract
Long traditions in the social sciences have emphasized the gradual internalization of intergroup attitudes and the putatively more basic tendency to prefer the groups to which one belongs. In four experiments (N = 883) spanning two cultures and two status groups within one of those cultures, we obtained new evidence that implicit intergroup attitudes emerge in young children in a form indistinguishable from adult attitudes. Strikingly, this invariance from childhood to adulthood holds for members of socially dominant majorities, who consistently favor their in-group, as well as for members of a disadvantaged minority, who, from the early moments of race-based categorization, do not show a preference for their in-group. Far from requiring a protracted period of internalization, implicit intergroup attitudes are characterized by early enculturation and developmental invariance.Entities:
Keywords: attitudes; cognitive development; cultural differences; intergroup bias; prejudice; social cognition; social development
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23558550 DOI: 10.1177/0956797612463081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Sci ISSN: 0956-7976