Setting

 

The setting refers to the context in which the intervention was conducted, as reported in the body of the study. The categories defined for the setting were derived from the most frequent settings observed in the literature (e.g., "work", "faith-based", etc). 

6 Publications
Applied Filters: First Letter Of Title: N Reset
2009

This paper provides experimental evidence on whether having religiously different neighbors affects attitudes about other religious groups and/or preferences for interreligious living. I exploit a natural experiment in a large Indian city in which Hindus and Muslims were randomly assigned units in a public housing complex with physically…

2013

Recent research has identified several moderators of the effectiveness of imagined contact — a relatively new prejudice-reducing intervention. However, research to date has not examined the meta-cognitive experience of doing an imagined contact task (independent of the content of the instruction set), or the ways in which this meta-cognitive…

2000

Based on the false feedback procedure in an experimental group setting, this study analyses the ingroup bias change as a result of an individual ingroup bias evaluation (individual feedback: fair vs. discrimination) and an ingroup norm (fair vs. discrimination). The results show the existence of two different process of ingroup bias change. One…

2016

Normative influence and lay theories about homosexuality are central factors to understanding prejudiced attitudes against homosexuals. In this article, we analysed whether the influence of normative pressure to reduce homophobic prejudice depended on individuals' endorsement of beliefs about the nature of homosexuality. Study 1 showed that the…

1988

Cooperation in social dilemma situations is often explained in terms of egoistic incentives. These include: (i) explicit side payments in the form of rewards for cooperation and negative sanctions for defection, (ii) expectations of reciprocal altruism from others involved, and (iii) internalized positive utilities (e.g.,…

1997

In 2 studies, the authors investigate whether the greater ingroup favoritism typically expressed by numerical minorities, compared with numerical majorities, could be minimized by encouraging an interpersonal social orientation during intergroup cooperation. Study 1 examined how the type of social orientation adopted during cooperation affected…