Power can increase stereotyping: evidence from managers and subordinates in the hotel industry

Article


Guinote, A. and Phillips, A. 2010. Power can increase stereotyping: evidence from managers and subordinates in the hotel industry. Social Psychology. 41 (1), pp. 3-9. https://doi.org/10.1027/1864-9335/a000002
TypeArticle
TitlePower can increase stereotyping: evidence from managers and subordinates in the hotel industry
AuthorsGuinote, A. and Phillips, A.
Abstract

Previous research indicates that power increases attention to stereotype-consistent information. The ecological validity of this
hypothesis was tested in managers and subordinates in the hotel industry. Participants were presented with stereotype-consistent and stereotype-inconsistent information about an ingroup or outgroup target, and their task was to judge the suitability of the target for a job that was either consistent or inconsistent with the stereotype. Subordinates attended more to individuating information and paid overall more attention to social information than managers. In addition, the managers’ judgments of the suitability of the outgroup target were dependent on the stereotype consistency of the job, whereas the subordinates’ judgments were not. These findings are consistent with experimental research and shed light on the conditions that promote stereotyping and discrimination.

Sustainable Development Goals10 Reduced inequalities
Middlesex University ThemeHealth & Wellbeing
PublisherHogrefe Publishing
JournalSocial Psychology
ISSN1864-9335
Electronic2151-2590
Publication dates
Online15 Jan 2010
Print31 Jan 2010
Publication process dates
Deposited19 Jul 2022
Accepted08 Mar 2009
Output statusPublished
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1027/1864-9335/a000002
LanguageEnglish
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