Titel:Information Processing: The Power of the Human Mind in Influencing Collective Conflicts
Autor:Roth, Jenny
Weitere Verfasser:Loughnane, Jack
Weitere Beteiligte: Forum Friedenspsychologie e.V.
Veröffentlicht:2023
URI:https://archiv.ub.uni-marburg.de/es/2022/0056
URN: urn:nbn:de:hebis:04-es2022-00563
DOI: https://doi.org/10.17192/es2022.0056
ISBN: 978-3-8185-0565-3
DDC: Psychologie
Titel (trans.):Informationsverarbeitung: Die Macht des menschlichen Verstandes bei der Beeinflussung von kollektiven Konflikten
Publikationsdatum:2023-12-07
Lizenz:https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Dokument

Schlagwörter:
Intergruppen-Verzerrung, Confirmation Bi, Automatizität, ingroup favouritism, Akzentuierungseffekt, Eigengruppen-Favorisierung, confi, soziale Kognition, Kategorisierung, Soziale Wahrnehmung, stereotyping, automaticity, categorization, social cognition, intergroup bias, outgroup homogeneity, Stereotypisierung, category accentuation, Fremdgruppen-Homogenität

Summary:
Relations between social groups and their members are influenced by and influence how people perceive and judge each other. The way how people process information about others in fact represents an antecedent and consequence of intergroup relations. The present chapter illustrates how general cognitive mechanisms in processing information can lead to biases in perceiving and judging social groups and their members that in turn can influence intergroup relations. We will illustrate this by first, explaining how people process information in general and social information in specific. In specific, we will draw on social categorization and self-categorization and schema activation and application. Then, we will explain biases relevant for intergroup relations that arise at least in part from how people process social information along with attention and general learning mechanisms. We highlight category accentuation, outgroup homogeneity, ingroup favouritism complemented by outgroup derogation, and stereotyping. The underlying processes of the biases in perceiving and judging others can occur in an automatic fashion. Despite the potential automaticity involved, we highlight the crucial influence of people’s goals and motivation in influencing these biases. We end the chapter with a discussion how these intergroup biases complemented by confirmation biases that maintain and fortify the intergroup biases can contribute to collective conflicts.


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