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Downward social comparison in the minimal intergroup situation: A test of a
self-enhancement interpretation
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- Thompson, L. & Crocker, J. (1990). Downward social comparison in the minimal
intergroup situation: A test of a self-enhancement interpretation. Journal of Applied
Social Psychology, 20, 1166-1184.
Abstract
We tested some implications of Wills (1981) downward comparison
interpretation of ingroup bias in the minimal intergroup paradigm. Based on a
self-enhancement interpretation of ingroup bias, we predicted that subjects who expected
to succeed on a task for dispositional reasons and subsequently failed would be most
threatened by the feedback and hence, would engage in downward social comparison
strategies. The results did not support the self-enhancement interpretation, but a number
of interesting findings emerged. First, downward social comparison involving favorable
comparisons of the ingroup relative to the outgroup was pervasive and not mediated by
self-esteem. Second, ingroup bias was greatest when individuals outcomes were consistent
with their expectations; ingroup bias was mitigated when subjects received feedback
that was inconsistent with their expectations. Third, although low self-esteem subjects
rated members of the outgroup more negatively than did high self-esteem subjects, high
self-esteem subjects engaged in more downward social comparison by enhancing the self
relative to both members of the group and their own ingroup. Finally, self-enhancement
strategies were affected by performance expectations, attributions, and chronic
self-esteem: People who expected to perform well because of stable, dispositional reasons
and who were high in self-esteem showed the greatest tendency to engage in self-enhancing
comparisons with others. This was true regardless of whether subjects ultimately succeeded
or failed on the important task and regardless of whether the comparison others were
members of the outgroup or the ingroup.
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