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Social hierarchy stereotypes play an important role in triggering intergroup prejudices. However, few researchers explored how people with different power and status perceive the differences in the social hierarchy stereotypes of ingroup and outgroup. We used the probe recognition paradigm to examine the ingroup-outgroup effect of implicit social hierarchy stereotypes on warmth and competence. The results showed that the high-power groups showed an implicit ingroup preference on competence but no warmth-based bias, whereas low-power groups showed an implicit outgroup preference on competence and an implicit ingroup preference on warmth; the high-status groups showed implicit ingroup preferences on both competence and warmth, and low-status groups showed an implicit outgroup preference on competence and an implicit ingroup preference on warmth. This suggests that power and status play different roles in predicting the implicit stereotypes of warmth and competence.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijop.70106 | DOI Listing |
Zool Res
September 2025
Research Center of Henan Provincial Agricultural Biomass Resource Engineering and Technology, College of Life Science, Nanyang Normal University, Nanyang, Henan 473061, China.
Social hierarchies are central to the organizational structure of group-living species, shaping individual physiology, behavior, and social interactions. Dopaminergic (DA) systems, particularly within the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and dorsal raphe nucleus (DR), have been linked to motivation and competitive behaviors, yet their region-specific contributions to social dominance remain insufficiently defined. This study investigated the role of VTA and DR DA neurons in regulating social dominance in sexually naïve male C57BL/6J mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Psychol
October 2025
Department and Institute of Psychology, Ningbo University, Ningbo, China.
Social hierarchy stereotypes play an important role in triggering intergroup prejudices. However, few researchers explored how people with different power and status perceive the differences in the social hierarchy stereotypes of ingroup and outgroup. We used the probe recognition paradigm to examine the ingroup-outgroup effect of implicit social hierarchy stereotypes on warmth and competence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh Educ (Dordr)
October 2024
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
Theoretical and empirical contributions to research on evaluation have advanced our understanding of how values influence evaluation practice. Yet rather than understand how values shape evaluation and its use, research on the evaluation of widening participation (WP) programmes delivered by English higher education (HE) providers has focused on methodological deficits. Rather, this study explores the complexity of how national policy, organisational imperatives and the individual values of staff responsible for WP within HE providers influence how evaluation is practised and used to inform decision-making.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoc Psychol Personal Sci
November 2024
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA.
Although people often engage in prosocial behavior when witnessing prosocial others, little is known about whether and how prosociality spreads across different positions within a social hierarchy. One field study involving 79 U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Biol
September 2025
School of Biological Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GeorgiaUnited States of America.
Bacterial quorum sensing is often mediated by multiple signaling systems that interact with each other. The quorum-sensing systems of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, for example, are considered hierarchical, with the las system acting as a master regulator. By experimentally controlling the concentration of auto-inducer signals in a signal deficient strain (PAO1ΔlasIΔrhlI), we show that the two primary quorum-sensing systems-las and rhl-act reciprocally rather than hierarchically.
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