Stanford University.
Psychol Sci. 2013 Oct;24(10):1947-57. doi: 10.1177/0956797613481607. Epub 2013 Aug 7.
In the present research, we examined the hypothesis that cues of social connectedness to a member of another social group can spark interest in the group's culture, and that such interest, when freely enacted, contributes to reductions in intergroup prejudice. In two pilot studies and Experiment 1, we found that extant and desired cross-group friendships and cues of social connectedness to an out-group member predicted increased interest in the target group's culture. In Experiments 2 and 3, we manipulated cues of social connectedness between non-Latino American participants and a Latino American (i.e., Mexican American) peer and whether participants freely worked with this peer on a Mexican cultural task. This experience reduced the participants' implicit bias against Latinos, an effect that was mediated by increased cultural engagement, and, 6 months later in an unrelated context, improved intergroup outcomes (e.g., interest in interacting with Mexican Americans; Experiment 4). The Discussion section addresses the inter- and intragroup benefits of policies that encourage people to express and share diverse cultural interests in mainstream settings.
在本研究中,我们检验了这样一个假设,即与另一个社会群体成员的社会联系线索可以激发对该群体文化的兴趣,而这种兴趣在自由表现时,有助于减少群体间偏见。在两项初步研究和实验 1 中,我们发现现有的和期望的跨群体友谊以及与群体外成员的社会联系线索预示着对目标群体文化的兴趣增加。在实验 2 和 3 中,我们在非拉丁裔美国参与者和拉丁裔美国(即墨西哥裔美国人)同伴之间操纵社会联系线索,以及参与者是否自由地与这个同伴一起从事墨西哥文化任务。这种体验减少了参与者对拉丁人的内隐偏见,这种影响是通过增加文化参与来介导的,并且在 6 个月后的一个不相关的背景下,改善了群体间的结果(例如,对与墨西哥裔美国人互动的兴趣;实验 4)。讨论部分探讨了在主流环境中鼓励人们表达和分享不同文化兴趣的政策的群体间和群体内利益。