Journal Article10.1037/0022-3514.88.5.770
Different emotional reactions to different groups: a sociofunctional threat-based approach to "prejudice".
TL;DR: The authors suggest that the traditional conception of prejudice--as a general attitude or evaluation--can problematically obscure the rich texturing of emotions that people feel toward different groups.
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Abstract: The authors suggest that the traditional conception of prejudice--as a general attitude or evaluation--can problematically obscure the rich texturing of emotions that people feel toward different groups. Derived from a sociofunctional approach, the authors predicted that groups believed to pose qualitatively distinct threats to in-group resources or processes would evoke qualitatively distinct and functionally relevant emotional reactions. Participants' reactions to a range of social groups provided a data set unique in the scope of emotional reactions and threat beliefs explored. As predicted, different groups elicited different profiles of emotion and threat reactions, and this diversity was often masked by general measures of prejudice and threat. Moreover, threat and emotion profiles were associated with one another in the manner predicted: Specific classes of threat were linked to specific, functionally relevant emotions, and groups similar in the threat profiles they elicited were also similar in the emotion profiles they elicited.
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Citations
The Role of Emotion and Motivation in Jury Decision-Making
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present theories of emotion and decision-making, apply emotion research findings to a legal scenario to challenge the assumption of juror objectivity, and propose a system that recognizes and accounts for the variety of ways affect impacts jury decision making.
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