Open Research Newcastle
Browse

Positive imagined contact is actively chosen: exploring determinants and consequences of volitional intergroup imagery in a conflict-ridden setting

Download (526.36 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-09, 15:48 authored by Shenel Husnu, Stefania Paolini
Past research has ascertained the benefits of involuntary, "forced" exposure to positive imagined contact. This research explored determinants and consequences of actively chosen imagined contact in a setting of entrenched intergroup conflict. In Study 1, when given an unvalenced visualisation scenario enabling participants to steer the visualisation in any direction they wanted, Turkish Cypriots visualised an intergroup interaction nondistinguishable in quality to that of those assigned to a positive scenario. In Study 2, when asked to actively choose between visualising a positive or a negative intergroup interaction, Turkish Cypriots disproportionally preferred positive over negative contact. The chosen visualisation reflected mood and valenced confirmation biases and resulted in virtuous (vs. vicious) effects on group-level outcomes. These findings shed a first light on the psychological underpinnings of volitional intergroup imagery and indicate that intergroup imagery is a safe way of engaging with the outgroup even in contexts of entrenched conflict.

History

Journal title

Group Processes and Intergroup Relations

Volume

22

Issue

4

Pagination

511-529

Publisher

Sage

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science

School

School of Psychology

Rights statement

© 2019 Reprinted by permission of SAGE Publications.