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Negative intergroup contact makes group memberships salient: explaining why intergroup conflict endures

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posted on 2025-05-09, 23:35 authored by Stefania Paolini, Jake Harwood, Mark Rubin
Drawing from the intergroup contact model and self-categorization theory, the authors advanced the novel hypothesis of a valence-salience effect, whereby negative contact causes higher category salience than positive contact. As predicted, in a laboratory experiment of interethnic contact, White Australians (N = 49) made more frequent and earlier reference to ethnicity when describing their ethnic contact partner if she had displayed negative (vs. positive, neutral) nonverbal behavior. In a two-wave experimental study of retrieved intergenerational contact, American young adults (N = 240) reported age to be more salient during negative (vs. positive) contact and negative contact predicted increased episodic and chronic category salience over time. Some evidence for the reverse salience-valence effect was also found. Because category salience facilitates contact generalization, these results suggest that intergroup contact is potentially biased toward worsening intergroup relations; further implications for theory and policy making are discussed.

History

Journal title

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

Volume

36

Issue

12

Pagination

1723-1738

Publisher

Sage Publications

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science and Information Technology

School

School of Psychology

Rights statement

The final, definitive version of this paper has been published in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol 36 /Issue 12, December 2010 by SAGE Publications Ltd. / SAGE Publications, Inc., All rights reserved. ©2010

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