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The “Prejudiced Personality” Revisited: (Low) Agreeableness is Associated with Generalized Prejudice, but Openness is Not JARRET T. CRAWFORD THE COLLEGE OF NEW JERSEY MARK J. BRANDT TILBURG UNIVERSITY
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A trait-based approach to prejudice The Prejudiced Personality : “One of the facts of which we are most certain is that people who reject one out-group will tend to reject other out-groups. If a person is anti-Jewish, he is likely to be anti-Catholic, anti- Negro, anti any out-group.” (Allport, 1954, p. 68) Hodson & Dhont (2015)—some traits are consistently associated with prejudice against multiple outgroups: Authoritarianism Political conservatism Religiosity Disgust sensitivity Threat sensitivity Low cognitive ability (Low) Openness and Agreeableness
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(Low) Openness & Agreeableness are related to generalized prejudice Generalized prejudice expressed toward multiple groups Sibley & Duckitt (2008) meta-analyzed 25 studies (N = 4,713) including Big Five traits and measures of target-specific and generalized prejudice Openness r = -.30 Conscientiousness r =.02 Extraversion r = -.07 Agreeableness r = -.22 Neuroticism r = -.01
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Defining vs. Operationalizing Prejudice Most well-accepted definitions of prejudice are broad (Stangor, 2009): “a negative evaluation of a group or of an individual on the basis of group membership” (Crandall et al., 2002, p. 359) However, generalized prejudice has been operationalized narrowly towards socially disadvantaged and low status groups: Ethnic and racial minorities, women, immigrants, sexual minorities, disabled, Muslims, poor/unemployed people, elderly people (e.g., Akrami et al., 2011; Bergh et al., 2012; Duckitt & Sibley, 2007; Ekehammar & Akrami, 2003) Thus, mismatch between broad definition but narrow operationalization of prejudice
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Replicated in e.g., Chambers et al., 2013; Crawford, 2014; Crawford et al., 2014; Crawford et al., 2015; Crawford & Pilanski, 2014; Iyengar & Westwood, 2014; van Prooijen et al., 2015; Wetherell et al., 2013 Ideological Conflict Perspective (Brandt et al. 2014, CDPS) Low status and socially disadvantaged groups associated with liberal policies or liberal themselves (e.g., Chambers et al., 2013) Conservatism does not predict prejudice per se; ideology-prejudice relationship depends on target’s political orientation Worldview conflict (dissimilarity in beliefs/values) Requires inclusion of targets from both left (e.g., gay men and lesbians; welfare recipients) and right (e.g., Evangelical Christians; Wall Street executives)
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An ideological conflict approach to Big Five & generalized prejudice Are Openness and/or Agreeableness still associated with generalized prejudice under an inclusive operationalization? Are Conscientiousness, Extraversion, or Neuroticism now associated with generalized prejudice under an inclusive operationalization?
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Studies 1 and 2 Study 1: nationally representative sample—2012 American National Election Studies (ANES) Time-Series (n = 5,510)—examined prejudice against 24 mostly heterogeneous target groups Study 2: community sample from Mechanical Turk (n = 617) examined prejudice against 20 target groups drawn from previous ideological conflict studies Both studies used Ten-item Personality Inventory (TIPI; Gosling et al., 2003) to measure Big Five traits Both studies used Feeling thermometer ratings (0 – 100; reverse scored) to measure prejudice Generalized prejudice: average prejudice rating across all groups within each study
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Study 1 & 2 Results Partial correlations between trait & prejudice while controlling for the other four traits OCEAN Study 1-.03.04-.09***-.19***.04* Study 2-.02.001-.10*-.19***-.02
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Study 3 Study 3: community sample from MTurk (n = 509) 44-item Big Five Inventory (John & Srivistava, 1999) instead of TIPI Tested potential moderation of effects of: Openness (perceived conventionality; Brandt et al., 2015) Agreeableness (perceived warmth towards others; Graziano et al., 2007; Yarkoni et al., 2015) Extraversion (perceived assertiveness) Perceived worldview conflict as possible mediator Openness-prejudice relationships partially explained by worldview conflict (Brandt et al., 2015) 10 target groups to reduce participant fatigue
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Study 3 Results Partial correlations between trait & prejudice while controlling for the other four traits Target GroupPersonality Trait OCEAN Atheists-.23***-.05.03.13**.02 Gay men and lesbians-.18***-.03-.10*-.12*-.20*** Poor People-.09.02-.04-.29***-.13** Pro-choice activists-.14**-.06-.03.02-.09 Welfare recipients-.09.07.01-.19***-.11* Anti-gay activists.19***-.01.04-.04.13** Investment bankers.07-.01-.06-.03.03 Evangelical Christians.15**.05-.07-.22***.02 Pro-life activists.20***.05-.07-.24***.01 Wealthy people.01.02-.07.05 Generalized Prejudice-.02.01-.07-.21***-.05
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Moderation Analyses Examined moderating effects of perceived conventionality, assertiveness, and warmth on each trait-prejudice and trait- worldview conflict relationship No interactions with Agreeableness were significant Openness x Conventionality Neuroticism x Conventionality
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Mediation of Worldview Conflict High in Openness (+1 SD) Low in Openness (-1 SD) High in Neuroticism (+1 SD) Low in Neuroticism (-1 SD) Prejudice Conventionality Worldview Conflict Conventionality Worldview Conflict Prejudice.14(.04)*** 3.61(.27)*** 3.56(.27)*** -.02(.04).15(.04)*** -.02(.05) 3.56(.27)*** Sobel 3.38(.15)*** -.50(.15) 3.61(.15)*** -.40(.18)
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Meta-Analyses (total n = 7,040)
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Implications Low Openness does not orient people towards negative attitudes towards others Openness-prejudice relationship function of perceived worldview conflict with conventional/unconventional targets (Brandt et al., 2015) Low Agreeableness does orient people towards negative attitudes towards others Consistent relationship across studies (MA r = -.19) Relationship not moderated by worldview conflict, perceived warmth towards others, etc. Unrelated to worldview conflict Associated with prejudice against groups across political spectrum (e.g., liberals, conservatives, gay men/lesbians, Evangelicals) Make operationalization of “generalized prejudice” consistent with broad definitions of “prejudice” to understand processes underlying prejudice
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Thank you!
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Operationalization of prejudice matters for conclusions about individual differences-prejudice relationships Ideological conflict model perspective (Brandt, Reyna, Chambers, Crawford, & Wetherell, 2014): Low status and socially disadvantaged groups tend to be associated with liberal policies or are politically liberal themselves (e.g., Chambers et al., 2013) Conservatism does not predict prejudice per se; rather, the ideology- prejudice relationship depends on the political orientation of target Worldview conflict (dissimilarity in beliefs/values) This approach requires the inclusion of targets from across the political spectrum, from the left (e.g., gay men and lesbians; welfare recipients) to the right (e.g., Evangelical Christians; Wall Street executives)
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Replicated in e.g., Crawford, 2014; Crawford et al., 2014; Crawford et al., 2015; Iyengar & Westwood, 2014; van Prooijen et al., 2015 Wetherell et al. (2013)Crawford & Pilanski (2014) Chambers et al. (2013) From Brandt et al. 2014 CDPS
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Study 1 Results Target GroupPersonality Trait OCEAN Atheists-.10***.09***.001.01.02 Feminists -.12***.06**-.04*-.11***-.02 Gay men and lesbians-.16***.08***-.08***-.10***-.01 Labor unions-.10***.10***-.02-.04-.004 Liberals-.18***.12***-.02-.07***-.03 Muslims-.12***.07**-.01-.09***.02 People on welfare-.08***.13***.02-.11***.02 Poor people-.06**.07**-.03-.14***-.01 Big business.06**-.002-.05*-.02.05* Catholics.07**-.06**-.05*-.07**.03 Christian Fundamentalists.12***-.04-.03-.05*.003 Christians.08***-.06** -.14***.01 Conservatives.16***-.08***-.05*-.04*.01 Middle class people-.02-.04-.08***-.10***.02 Military.09***-.05*-.07***-.09***.01 Mormons.08***-.05*-.03-.09***.05* Rich people.02-.04-.08***-.07***.07** Tea Party.14***-.04*-.02.02 Working class people-.002-.06**-.07***-.12***-.01 Blacks-.07**.01-.04-.13***.04 Whites.05*-.05*-.10***-.11***.03 Asians-.06**-.03-.02-.08***.08*** Hispanics-.07**-.01-.04-.11***.04 Illegal immigrants-.09***.12***.01-.04.04 Generalized Prejudice-.03.04-.09***-.19***.04* Partial correlations between trait & prejudice while controlling for the other four traits
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Study 2 Results Partial correlations between trait & prejudice while controlling for the other four traits Target GroupPersonality Trait OCEAN Atheists-.16***.06.05.06.02 Feminists-.18***.04-.05-.13**-.17*** Gays and lesbians-.25***.02-.05-.09*-.15*** Poor people-.13**.07.02-.21***-.07 Pro-choice activists-.23***.02-.06.03-.11** Sluts-.17***.18***.02.07-.03 Socialists-.15***.10*.03-.05-.07 Unemployed people-.11**.08-.01-.17***-.09* Labor unions-.08*.04.02-.07 Welfare recipients-.12**.15***.02-.15***-.07 Anti-gay activists.18***-.02 -.04-.08 Bankers.12**-.08-.18***-.04-.01 Businesspeople.05-.10*-.14**-.01.07 Elderly people-.03-.06-.03-.26***-.06 Evangelical Christians.18***-.02-.08*-.15***-.01 Pro-life activists.20***-.08*-.07-.17***.10* Prudes.07.04-.03-.01-.08 Small business owners-.09*-.04-.05-.10*-.01 Wall street executives.15***-.07-.12**-.02.04 Wealthy people.07-.03-.15***-.06.09* Generalized Prejudice-.02.001-.10*-.19***-.02
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Future Directions Moderation of Extraversion-prejudice and Agreeableness-prejudice relationships? Extend from Big Five to HEXACO Honesty-Humility and Agreeableness
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