- that
individuals are
faster and more
accurate at
recognizing faces of
ingroup vs.
outgroup members. For example,
researchers in a cross-race recognition...
- the
tendency of
group members to
judge likeable ingroup members more
positively and
deviant ingroup members more
negatively than
comparable outgroup...
-
ingroup, the set of
organisms under study, and is
distinct from
sociological outgroups. The
outgroup is used as a
point of
comparison for the
ingroup...
-
intergroup behaviour. "Social
identity theory explores the
phenomenon of the '
ingroup' and 'outgroup', and is
based on the view that
identities are constituted...
- joke, is a joke with
humour that is
understandable only to
members of an
ingroup; that is,
people who are in a
particular social group, occupation, or other...
- or
ingroup.
Several researchers have
examined the role of
ingroup identification (i.e. a person's
prolonged psychological connection to an
ingroup) and...
-
looks with
contempt on outsiders". This is seen on the
group level with
ingroup–outgroup bias. When
experienced in
larger groups such as tribes, ethnic...
-
Infrahumanisation (or infrahumanization) is the
tacitly held
belief that one's
ingroup is more
human than an outgroup,
which is less human. The term was coined...
-
making salient a
common ingroup identity that encomp****es the
group identities of the
preexisting categorization. This
common ingroup identity is more inclusive...
-
referring to
perceived outgroup variability unrelated to
perceptions of the
ingroup. The
outgroup homogeneity effect is
sometimes referred to as "outgroup...