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Looking through the eyes of the powerful
Authors:Joris Lammers  Ernestine H. Gordijn
Affiliation:a Tilburg Institute for Behavioral Economics Research, Department of Social Psychology, Tilburg University, Warandelaan 2, 5037 AB Tilburg, The Netherlands
b University of Groningen, Department of Social and Organizational Psychology, Grote Kruisstraat 2/I, 9712 TS Groningen, The Netherlands
Abstract:Across four experiments, we test the idea that power decreases metastereotyping, and that this effect is mediated by reduced perspective taking. Metastereotypes refer to the beliefs that members of group A share about the stereotypes that members of specific outgroup B typically have about ingroup A. We propose that the dominant psychological orientation of the powerless is aimed at seeing how others see them. In an intergroup situation they are therefore inclined to activate and apply metastereotypes. In the first three experiments we consistently find that low power leads to more metastereotyping than high power and control (in Experiment 3). Specifically, we show this effect with three different manipulations of power, namely a role manipulation (Experiment 1), experiential priming (Experiment 2), and parafoveal priming (Experiment 3). In the fourth experiment we uncover the mediating role of perspective taking. Together these findings provide strong evidence that powerlessness leads to metastereotyping.
Keywords:Power   Metastereotype   Stereotype   Perspective taking   Intergroup relations   Perception
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