Stereotype Activation and Inhibition

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advanced social cognition research
affective information processing
attitude accessibility
Behavioral Confirmation
Category Dominance
Category=JMH
Category=JMR
chapter
cognitive
Cognitive Inhibition
Contrast Effects
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eq_isMigrated=1
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Goal Dependent Automaticity
hierarchical control theory
Individuating Information
inhibitory
Inhibitory Mechanisms
Judgment Standards
lateral
Lateral Inhibition
mechanism
memory retrieval processes
negative
Negative Priming
Negative Stereotypic Traits
Personal Control Variables
Personal Stereotype
priming
processes
Rebound Effect
self-regulation in bias
Slowed Judgments
social cognitive neuroscience
Social Control Variables
Social Information Processing
Spontaneous Trait Inferences
Stereotype Activation
Stereotype Rebounds
Stereotype Suppression
Stereotyping Phenomena
suppression
target
Target Chapter
Unprejudiced Individuals
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805823394
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 1998
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The use of social sterotypes as a basis for judgments and behavioral decisions has been a major focus of social psychological theory and research since the field began. Although motivational and cognitive influences on stereotyping have been considered, these two general types of influence have rarely been conceptually integrated within a common theoretical framework. Nevertheless, almost every area of theoretical and empirical concern in social cognition--areas such as the interpretation of new information, memory and retrieval processes, impression formation, the use of heuristic vs. analytic processing strategies, the role of affect in information processing, and self-esteem maintenance--has implications for this important social phenomenon.

This volume's target article brings together the research of Galen Bodenhausen, Neil Macrae, and others within a theoretical framework that accounts for the processes that underlie both the activation of stereotypes and attempts to suppress their influence. They consider several stages of processing, including:
*the categorization of a stimulus person;
*the influence of this categorization on the interpretation of information about the stimulus person; and
*the social judgments and behavioral decisions that are ultimately made.
The stereotype activation and suppression mechanisms that the target article authors consider operate at all of these stages. Their conceptualization provides a framework within which the interrelatedness of processing at these stages can be understood.

The 11th in the series, this volume includes companion articles that help to refine and extend the target article's conceptualization and make important theoretical contributions in their own right. They are written by prominent researchers in cognitive and social psychology, many of whom are active contributors to research and theory on stereotyping. They address the following topics:
* the role of power and control in stereotype-based information processing;
* the influence of prejudice;
* self-regulatory processes;
* social categorization;
* the correction processes that result from perceptions of bias; and
* the conceptualization of stereotypes themselves.