A model of (often mixed) stereotype content: Competence and warmth respectively follow from perceived status and competition.
Princeton University · University of California, Los Angeles
Abstract
Stereotype research emphasizes systematic processes over seemingly arbitrary contents, but content also may prove systematic. On the basis of stereotypes' intergroup functions, the stereotype content model hypothesizes that (a) 2 primary dimensions are competence and warmth, (b) frequent mixed clusters combine high warmth with low competence (paternalistic) or high competence with low warmth (envious), and (c) distinct emotions (pity, envy, admiration, contempt) differentiate the 4 competence-warmth combinations. Stereotypically, (d) status predicts high competence, and competition predicts low warmth. Nine varied samples rated gender, ethnicity, race, class, age, and disability out-groups. Contrary to…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 97.26
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 146
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Social psychology
- Admiration
- Competence (human resources)
- Contempt
- Developmental psychology
- Gender equality