Title of article
The color of safety: Ingroup-associated colors make beer safer
Author/Authors
Loersch، نويسنده , , Chris and Bartholow، نويسنده , , Bruce D.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
5
From page
190
To page
194
Abstract
Individuals display high levels of trust and express feelings of safety when interacting with social ingroup members. Here, we investigated whether cues related to ingroup membership would change perceptions of the safety of alcohol. Participants were exposed to images of beer in either a standard can or a can featuring the colors of their university (i.e., ‘fan cans’). We hypothesized that exposure to fan cans would change perceptions of the risks of beer drinking. Results showed that participants exposed to fan cans rated beer consumption as less dangerous (Experiment 1), were more likely to automatically activate safety-related mental content after unconscious perception of beer cues (Experiment 2), and viewed their ingroupʹs party practices as less dangerous (Experiment 3). These results provide evidence that ingroup-associated colors can serve as a safety cue for alcohol, which may in theory perpetuate alcohol-related risk-taking, already a cause for concern on college and university campuses.
Keywords
automaticity , Ingroup , Priming , alcohol , group processes
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1959712
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