University of California, Davis, United States.
University of California, Davis, United States; Florida International University, United States.
Cogn Psychol. 2021 Sep;129:101408. doi: 10.1016/j.cogpsych.2021.101408. Epub 2021 Jul 27.
Across three studies (N = 607), we examined people's use of a dichotomizing heuristic-the inference that characteristics belonging to one group do not apply to another group-when making judgments about novel social groups. Participants learned information about one group (e.g., "Zuttles like apples"), and then made inferences about another group (e.g., "Do Twiggums like apples or hate apples?"). Study 1 acted as a proof of concept: Eight-year-olds and adults (but not 5-year-olds) assumed that the two groups would have opposite characteristics. Learning about the group as a generic whole versus as specific individuals boosted the use of the heuristic. Study 2 and Study 3 (sample sizes, methods, and analyses pre-registered), examined whether the presence or absence of several factors affected the activation and scope of the dichotomizing heuristic in adults. Whereas learning about or treating the groups as separate was necessary for activating dichotomous thinking, intergroup conflict and featuring only two (versus many) groups was not required. Moreover, the heuristic occurred when participants made both binary and scaled decisions. Once triggered, adults applied this cognitive shortcut widely-not only to benign (e.g., liking apples) and novel characteristics (e.g., liking modies), but also to evaluative traits signaling the morals or virtues of a social group (e.g., meanness or intelligence). Adults did not, however, extend the heuristic to the edges of improbability: They failed to dichotomize when doing so would attribute highly unusual preferences (e.g., disliking having fun). Taken together, these studies indicate the presence of a dichotomizing heuristic with broad implications for how people make social group inferences.
在三项研究中(N=607),我们考察了人们在对新的社会群体进行判断时使用二分法启发式的情况——即推断一个群体的特征不适用于另一个群体。参与者先了解一个群体的信息(例如,“Zuttles 喜欢苹果”),然后对另一个群体做出推断(例如,“Twiggums 喜欢苹果还是讨厌苹果?”)。研究 1 作为一个概念验证:8 岁和成年人(但不是 5 岁)假设这两个群体将具有相反的特征。将群体作为整体而不是具体个体来学习,会增加启发式的使用。研究 2 和研究 3(样本量、方法和分析预先注册),考察了在成年人中,是否存在几种因素会影响二分法启发式的激活和范围。虽然学习或对待群体为独立个体是激活二分思维所必需的,但群体之间的冲突以及只呈现两个(而不是多个)群体并非必需。此外,当参与者做出二元和比例决策时,启发式就会发生。一旦被触发,成年人就会广泛地应用这种认知捷径——不仅适用于良性(例如,喜欢苹果)和新颖的特征(例如,喜欢 modies),还适用于表示一个社会群体道德或美德的评价特征(例如,卑鄙或聪明)。然而,成年人并没有将启发式扩展到不太可能的范围之外:当这样做会归因于非常不寻常的偏好(例如,不喜欢娱乐)时,他们不会进行二分法。总之,这些研究表明存在一种二分法启发式,它对人们如何进行社会群体推断具有广泛的影响。