The Distinctiveness Effect in Social Categorization: You Are What Makes You Unusual
- 1 July 1995
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Psychological Science
- Vol. 6 (4) , 246-249
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9280.1995.tb00600.x
Abstract
Three studies tested the hypothesis that people assume that the identities of other people are tied more closely to their distinctive than to their nondistinctive traits In Studies 1 and 3, subjects predicted the preferences of a target person who was a member of both a statistically distinctive and a statistically nondistinctive category (e g, sky diver and tennis player) In Study 2, subjects judged the degree of interpersonal similarity between pairs of people sharing distinctive as opposed to nondistinctive category memberships Consistent with the hypothesis, subjects linked targets with their more distinctive traits and assumed targets would be more similar to people who shared their distinctive traits than to people who shared their nondistinctive traits The implications of this distinctiveness effect for an understanding of stereotyping are exploredKeywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Particularistic and universalistic evaluation in the social comparison process.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1988
- Combining Prototypes: A Selective Modification ModelCognitive Science, 1988
- Perceived Variability of Personal Characteristics in In-Groups and Out-GroupsPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1981
- Categorical and contextual bases of person memory and stereotyping.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1978
- Salience of ethnicity in the spontaneous self-concept as a function of one's ethnic distinctiveness in the social environment.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1978
- Salience, Attention, and Attribution: Top of the Head PhenomenaAdvances in Experimental Social Psychology, 1978
- Features of similarity.Psychological Review, 1977
- Trait salience in the spontaneous self-concept.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1976
- Dilemmas and Contradictions of StatusAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1945