author_facet Yzerbyt, Vincent Y.
Leyens, Jacques‐Philippe
Bellour, Fanny
Yzerbyt, Vincent Y.
Leyens, Jacques‐Philippe
Bellour, Fanny
author Yzerbyt, Vincent Y.
Leyens, Jacques‐Philippe
Bellour, Fanny
spellingShingle Yzerbyt, Vincent Y.
Leyens, Jacques‐Philippe
Bellour, Fanny
European Journal of Social Psychology
The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
Social Psychology
author_sort yzerbyt, vincent y.
spelling Yzerbyt, Vincent Y. Leyens, Jacques‐Philippe Bellour, Fanny 0046-2772 1099-0992 Wiley Social Psychology http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2420250102 <jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>There are circumstances in which one is reluctant to express a judgment on the basis of the available information. This is for instance the case when the decision may jeopardize the integrity of the group one is a member of. In particular, ingroup members are considered less judgeable than outgroup members. This phenomenon corresponds to the ingroup overexclusion effect (Leyens and Yzerbyt, 1992). An experimental situation was designed in order to rule out an explanation of this phenomenon in terms of confirmation of hypothesis. French‐ or Dutch‐speaking subjects heard recordings of 40 sentences and, depending on the specific wording of the question, decided whether the speakers belonged to the group of French‐speaking (i.e. Walloon) versus Dutch‐speaking (i.e. Flemish) Belgians or not. The 40 sentences enabled to cross three factors with five sentences in each cell: Walloon versus Flemish speakers, French versus Dutch sentences, and short versus long sentences. As predicted, subjects made most errors when ingroup members read short outgroup sentences. Most importantly, the specific wording of the question did not lead to a reversal of the pattern of errors of group identification. Subjects also took longer to make a decision about an ingroup member reading an outgroup sentence than about an outgroup member reading an ingroup sentence. Such a pattern clearly supports a motivational explanation and undermines a confirmation of hypothesis explanation of the ingroup overexclusion effect. Older accounts of ethnic identification phenomena are addressed and it is suggested that identity concerns greatly affect impression formation processes.</jats:p> The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership European Journal of Social Psychology
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title The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_unstemmed The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_full The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_fullStr The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_full_unstemmed The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_short The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_sort the ingroup overexclusion effect: identity concerns in decisions about group membership
topic Social Psychology
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2420250102
publishDate 1995
physical 1-16
description <jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>There are circumstances in which one is reluctant to express a judgment on the basis of the available information. This is for instance the case when the decision may jeopardize the integrity of the group one is a member of. In particular, ingroup members are considered less judgeable than outgroup members. This phenomenon corresponds to the ingroup overexclusion effect (Leyens and Yzerbyt, 1992). An experimental situation was designed in order to rule out an explanation of this phenomenon in terms of confirmation of hypothesis. French‐ or Dutch‐speaking subjects heard recordings of 40 sentences and, depending on the specific wording of the question, decided whether the speakers belonged to the group of French‐speaking (i.e. Walloon) versus Dutch‐speaking (i.e. Flemish) Belgians or not. The 40 sentences enabled to cross three factors with five sentences in each cell: Walloon versus Flemish speakers, French versus Dutch sentences, and short versus long sentences. As predicted, subjects made most errors when ingroup members read short outgroup sentences. Most importantly, the specific wording of the question did not lead to a reversal of the pattern of errors of group identification. Subjects also took longer to make a decision about an ingroup member reading an outgroup sentence than about an outgroup member reading an ingroup sentence. Such a pattern clearly supports a motivational explanation and undermines a confirmation of hypothesis explanation of the ingroup overexclusion effect. Older accounts of ethnic identification phenomena are addressed and it is suggested that identity concerns greatly affect impression formation processes.</jats:p>
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author Yzerbyt, Vincent Y., Leyens, Jacques‐Philippe, Bellour, Fanny
author_facet Yzerbyt, Vincent Y., Leyens, Jacques‐Philippe, Bellour, Fanny, Yzerbyt, Vincent Y., Leyens, Jacques‐Philippe, Bellour, Fanny
author_sort yzerbyt, vincent y.
container_issue 1
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container_title European Journal of Social Psychology
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description <jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>There are circumstances in which one is reluctant to express a judgment on the basis of the available information. This is for instance the case when the decision may jeopardize the integrity of the group one is a member of. In particular, ingroup members are considered less judgeable than outgroup members. This phenomenon corresponds to the ingroup overexclusion effect (Leyens and Yzerbyt, 1992). An experimental situation was designed in order to rule out an explanation of this phenomenon in terms of confirmation of hypothesis. French‐ or Dutch‐speaking subjects heard recordings of 40 sentences and, depending on the specific wording of the question, decided whether the speakers belonged to the group of French‐speaking (i.e. Walloon) versus Dutch‐speaking (i.e. Flemish) Belgians or not. The 40 sentences enabled to cross three factors with five sentences in each cell: Walloon versus Flemish speakers, French versus Dutch sentences, and short versus long sentences. As predicted, subjects made most errors when ingroup members read short outgroup sentences. Most importantly, the specific wording of the question did not lead to a reversal of the pattern of errors of group identification. Subjects also took longer to make a decision about an ingroup member reading an outgroup sentence than about an outgroup member reading an ingroup sentence. Such a pattern clearly supports a motivational explanation and undermines a confirmation of hypothesis explanation of the ingroup overexclusion effect. Older accounts of ethnic identification phenomena are addressed and it is suggested that identity concerns greatly affect impression formation processes.</jats:p>
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spelling Yzerbyt, Vincent Y. Leyens, Jacques‐Philippe Bellour, Fanny 0046-2772 1099-0992 Wiley Social Psychology http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2420250102 <jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>There are circumstances in which one is reluctant to express a judgment on the basis of the available information. This is for instance the case when the decision may jeopardize the integrity of the group one is a member of. In particular, ingroup members are considered less judgeable than outgroup members. This phenomenon corresponds to the ingroup overexclusion effect (Leyens and Yzerbyt, 1992). An experimental situation was designed in order to rule out an explanation of this phenomenon in terms of confirmation of hypothesis. French‐ or Dutch‐speaking subjects heard recordings of 40 sentences and, depending on the specific wording of the question, decided whether the speakers belonged to the group of French‐speaking (i.e. Walloon) versus Dutch‐speaking (i.e. Flemish) Belgians or not. The 40 sentences enabled to cross three factors with five sentences in each cell: Walloon versus Flemish speakers, French versus Dutch sentences, and short versus long sentences. As predicted, subjects made most errors when ingroup members read short outgroup sentences. Most importantly, the specific wording of the question did not lead to a reversal of the pattern of errors of group identification. Subjects also took longer to make a decision about an ingroup member reading an outgroup sentence than about an outgroup member reading an ingroup sentence. Such a pattern clearly supports a motivational explanation and undermines a confirmation of hypothesis explanation of the ingroup overexclusion effect. Older accounts of ethnic identification phenomena are addressed and it is suggested that identity concerns greatly affect impression formation processes.</jats:p> The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership European Journal of Social Psychology
spellingShingle Yzerbyt, Vincent Y., Leyens, Jacques‐Philippe, Bellour, Fanny, European Journal of Social Psychology, The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership, Social Psychology
title The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_full The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_fullStr The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_full_unstemmed The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_short The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_sort the ingroup overexclusion effect: identity concerns in decisions about group membership
title_unstemmed The ingroup overexclusion effect: Identity concerns in decisions about group membership
topic Social Psychology
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2420250102