Infrahumanization or Familiarity? Attribution of Uniquely Human Emotions to the Self, the Ingroup, and the Outgroup

Author:

Cortes Brezo P.1,Demoulin Stéphanie2,Rodriguez Ramon T.3,Rodriguez Armando P.3,Leyens Jacques-Philippe4

Affiliation:

1. Catholic University of Louvain at Louvain-la-Neuve

2. Catholic University of Louvain at Louvain-la-Neuve and Belgian National Fund for Scientific Research

3. University of La Laguna

4. Catholic University of Louvain at Louvain-la-Neuve,

Abstract

People attribute more secondary emotions to their ingroup than to outgroups. This effect is interpreted in terms of infrahumanization theory. Familiarity also could explain this differential attribution because secondary emotions are thought to be less visible and intense than primary ones. This alternative explanation to infrahumanization was tested in three studies. In Study 1, participants attributed, in a between-participants design, primary and secondary emotions to themselves, to their ingroup, or to an outgroup. In Study 2, participants answered for themselves and their ingroup or for themselves and an outgroup. In Study 3, participants made attributions to the ingroup or a series of outgroups varying in terms of familiarity. The data do not support an explanation in terms of familiarity. The discussion centers on conditions not conducting to infrahumanization.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Psychology

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1. Emotions as constituents, predictors and outcomes of dehumanization;Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences;2023-06

2. Infrahumanization: a restrospective on 20 years of empirical research;Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences;2023-04

3. Animalistic dehumanisation as a social influence strategy;Frontiers in Psychology;2023-01-11

4. The DataScope: A Mixed-Initiative Architecture for Data Labeling;Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting;2022-09

5. Dehumanization, attitudes toward seeking professional psychological care, and mental health among African American women.;Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology;2022-07-11

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