Literature DB >> 32434913

As diversity increases, people paradoxically perceive social groups as more similar.

Xuechunzi Bai1,2, Miguel R Ramos3,4, Susan T Fiske5,2.   

Abstract

With globalization and immigration, societal contexts differ in sheer variety of resident social groups. Social diversity challenges individuals to think in new ways about new kinds of people and where their groups all stand, relative to each other. However, psychological science does not yet specify how human minds represent social diversity, in homogeneous or heterogenous contexts. Mental maps of the array of society's groups should differ when individuals inhabit more and less diverse ecologies. Nonetheless, predictions disagree on how they should differ. Confirmation bias suggests more diversity means more stereotype dispersion: With increased exposure, perceivers' mental maps might differentiate more among groups, so their stereotypes would spread out (disperse). In contrast, individuation suggests more diversity means less stereotype dispersion, as perceivers experience within-group variety and between-group overlap. Worldwide, nationwide, individual, and longitudinal datasets (n = 12,011) revealed a diversity paradox: More diversity consistently meant less stereotype dispersion. Both contextual and perceived ethnic diversity correlate with decreased stereotype dispersion. Countries and US states with higher levels of ethnic diversity (e.g., South Africa and Hawaii, versus South Korea and Vermont), online individuals who perceive more ethnic diversity, and students who moved to more ethnically diverse colleges mentally represent ethnic groups as more similar to each other, on warmth and competence stereotypes. Homogeneity shows more-differentiated stereotypes; ironically, those with the least exposure have the most-distinct stereotypes. Diversity means less-differentiated stereotypes, as in the melting pot metaphor. Diversity and reduced dispersion also correlate positively with subjective wellbeing.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cognitive process; intergroup relations; perceived similarity; social diversity; stereotypes

Year:  2020        PMID: 32434913      PMCID: PMC7293612          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2000333117

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  28 in total

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Review 6.  (Mis)perceptions of inequality.

Authors:  Oliver P Hauser; Michael I Norton
Journal:  Curr Opin Psychol       Date:  2017-07-24

7.  Integrating The Stereotype Content Model (Warmth And Competence) And The Osgood Semantic Differential (Evaluation, Potency, And Activity).

Authors:  Nicolas Kervyn; Susan T Fiske; Vincent Y Yzerbyt
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8.  Humans adapt to social diversity over time.

Authors:  Miguel R Ramos; Matthew R Bennett; Douglas S Massey; Miles Hewstone
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-05-09       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Nations' income inequality predicts ambivalence in stereotype content: how societies mind the gap.

Authors:  Federica Durante; Susan T Fiske; Nicolas Kervyn; Amy J C Cuddy; Adebowale Debo Akande; Bolanle E Adetoun; Modupe F Adewuyi; Magdeline M Tserere; Ananthi Al Ramiah; Khairul Anwar Mastor; Fiona Kate Barlow; Gregory Bonn; Romin W Tafarodi; Janine Bosak; Ed Cairns; Claire Doherty; Dora Capozza; Anjana Chandran; Xenia Chryssochoou; Tilemachos Iatridis; Juan Manuel Contreras; Rui Costa-Lopes; Roberto González; Janet I Lewis; Gerald Tushabe; Jacques-Philippe Leyens; Renée Mayorga; Nadim N Rouhana; Vanessa Smith Castro; Rolando Perez; Rosa Rodríguez-Bailón; Miguel Moya; Elena Morales Marente; Marisol Palacios Gálvez; Chris G Sibley; Frank Asbrock; Chiara C Storari
Journal:  Br J Soc Psychol       Date:  2012-10-05

10.  Stereotype content model across cultures: towards universal similarities and some differences.

Authors:  Amy J C Cuddy; Susan T Fiske; Virginia S Y Kwan; Peter Glick; Stéphanie Demoulin; Jacques-Philippe Leyens; Michael Harris Bond; Jean-Claude Croizet; Naomi Ellemers; Ed Sleebos; Tin Tin Htun; Hyun-Jeong Kim; Greg Maio; Judi Perry; Kristina Petkova; Valery Todorov; Rosa Rodríguez-Bailón; Elena Morales; Miguel Moya; Marisol Palacios; Vanessa Smith; Rolando Perez; Jorge Vala; Rene Ziegler
Journal:  Br J Soc Psychol       Date:  2009-03
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2.  Minority salience and the overestimation of individuals from minority groups in perception and memory.

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5.  Stereotypes of Social Groups in Mainland China in Terms of Warmth and Competence: Evidence from a Large Undergraduate Sample.

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