Title of article :
How social identity shapes the working self-concept
Author/Authors :
Sim، نويسنده , , Jessica J. and Goyle، نويسنده , , Arina and McKedy، نويسنده , , Whitney and Eidelman، نويسنده , , Scott and Correll، نويسنده , , Joshua، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Abstract :
This research investigates the process by which salient ingroups alter the working self-concept. The antagonism account, exemplified by self-categorization theory, contends that when ingroups are salient, the collective self defines the self-concept whereas the individual self recedes. In contrast, an adaption account argues that the individual self operates as a stable source of self-definition. While the working self-concept may flexibly incorporate aspects of salient ingroups, attributes that define the individual self are always actively represented. We also considered the ingroupʹs psychological utility as a moderator of its influence on the self-concept. To directly test these hypotheses, we manipulated the salience of an ingroup previously rated as either low or high in psychological utility and asked participants to classify traits as self-descriptive or not. When ingroups were made salient, participants increasingly endorsed ingroup traits as self-descriptive. Critically, this effect mainly emerged for groups with high psychological utility. Contrary to the antagonism account, but consistent with the adaption account, the impact of individual self-traits on the self-concept did not diminish as a result of ingroup salience.
Keywords :
Ingroup salience , Self-categorization , social identity , Utility , Self-concept
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology