University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
Br J Soc Psychol. 2013 Sep;52(3):543-62. doi: 10.1111/j.2044-8309.2012.02110.x. Epub 2012 Jun 11.
The present paper investigates how people identify with groups depending on the clarity of a group's identity content. According to self-categorization theory, self-stereotyping (i.e., projection of group prototypes onto self) should be the cognitive process underlying social identification. We argue, however, that this is only plausible in clearly defined groups. If a group is unclear in terms of its identity content, we argue that self-anchoring (i.e., projection of personal self onto group) accounts for social identification. In line with these hypotheses, two studies (with minimal and real groups) reveal that self-anchoring positively predicts the level of social identification and entitativity in unclearly, but not clearly defined groups. Conversely, self-stereotyping positively predicts the level of social identification in clearly, but not unclearly defined groups. Together, these findings are the first to demonstrate the differential impact of cognitive projection processes on social identification depending on group clarity.
本文旨在探讨人们如何根据群体身份内容的明确程度来认同群体。根据自我归类理论,自我刻板印象(即将群体原型投射到自我上)应该是社会认同的认知过程。然而,我们认为,这只有在明确界定的群体中才合理。如果一个群体在其身份内容方面不明确,我们认为自我锚定(即将个人自我投射到群体上)解释了社会认同。这与这些假设一致,两项研究(使用最小群体和真实群体)表明,自我锚定正向预测了不明确但非明确界定群体的社会认同和实体感水平。相反,自我刻板印象正向预测了明确界定群体的社会认同水平。总之,这些发现首次证明了认知投射过程对社会认同的影响取决于群体的清晰度。