Imagining Intergroup Contact Can Improve Intergroup Attitudes Author Rhiannon Turner, Richard Crisp, Emily Lambert Publication Year 2007 Type Journal Article Abstract We investigated whether simply imagining contact with outgroup members can improve intergroup attitudes. In Experiment 1, young participants who imagined talking to an elderly person subsequently showed lower levels of intergroup bias than participants who imagined an outdoor scene. In Experiment 2, young participants who imagined talking to an elderly person subsequently showed lower levels of intergroup bias than participants who simply thought about elderly people, ruling out a priming explanation for our findings. In Experiment 3, heterosexual men who imagined talking to a homosexual man subsequently evaluated homosexual men more positively, perceived there to be greater variability among them, and experienced less intergroup anxiety compared to a control group. The effect of imagined contact on outgroup evaluations was mediated by reduced intergroup anxiety. These findings suggest that imagining intergroup contact could represent a viable alternative for reducing prejudice where actual contact between groups is impractical. Keywords intergroup contact Journal Group Processes & Intergroup Relations Volume 10 Pages 427–441 Type of Article Journal Article DOI 10.1177/1368430207081533 Full text Open access via the link provided. Type of Prejudice/Bias Age Sexuality Country United Kingdom Method Lab Setting College/University Google ScholarDOIBibTeX