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Self-categorization of users’ comments and ingroup influence: The moderating role of context-dependent ingroup identification
Author(s) -
Jeong-woo Jang,
Joseph B. Walther
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cyberpsychology journal of psychosocial research on cyberspace
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.85
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 1802-7962
DOI - 10.5817/cp2019-4-3
Subject(s) - ingroups and outgroups , categorization , outgroup , psychology , social identity theory , social psychology , in group favoritism , identification (biology) , context (archaeology) , identity (music) , social group , linguistics , paleontology , philosophy , botany , physics , acoustics , biology
A web-based experiment (N = 184) examined whether social identity cues embedded in users’ comments elicit ingroup bias. Participants viewed a mock Yelp.com webpage that displayed information about a local business together with four users’ comments. Consistent with self-categorization theory, viewers adopted their ingroup’s comments, but only when they identified highly with their ingroup. Further, a central message that was juxtaposed with users’ comments and shaped their focus, determined the degree of ingroup identification; viewers were more likely to identify with their ingroup when the central message dealt with an outgroup-typed (vs. ingroup-typed) topic. Finally, although an outgroup-typed central message elicited stereotypical beliefs of the outgroup’s expertise, such beliefs failed to predict viewers’ attitudes, thus lending support to the ingroup identification explanation.

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