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Cognitive Processes in Stereotype Formation: The Role of Correct Contingency Learning for Biased Group Judgments.
Authors:Meiser  Thorsten; Hewstone  Miles
Abstract:Three studies investigated contingency learning and stereotype formation in a scenario about group membership and behavior with a confounding context factor. The studies tested predictions from theoretical accounts of biased group judgments in terms of simplistic reasoning, parallel distributed memory, and pseudocontingencies. Study 1 revealed a positive correlation between erroneous stereotype formation and learning of the true contingencies with the confounding factor. Study 2 showed that a focus manipulation during encoding moderated the correlation between stereotype formation and contingency learning but not the strength of the erroneous stereotype. Study 3 used a quasiexperimental comparison between participants with biased versus unbiased group judgments and extended the findings of a positive relation between stereotype formation and contingency learning. The results support an explanation of biased group judgments by pseudocontingencies; that is, unwarranted inferences from accurately perceived bivariate correlations in complex environments. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:stereotype formation  cognitive processes  contingency learning  biased group judgments  group membership  simplistic reasoning  parallel distributed memory  pseudocontingencies  inference
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