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STEREOTYPES AS JUDGMENTAL HEURISTICS: EVIDENCE OF CIRCADIAN VARIATIONS IN DISCRIMINATION
Galen V. Bodenhausen 1
  1 Michigan State University
 Correspondence and reprint requests to Galen V. Bodenhausen, Department of Psychology, Psychology Research Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824-1117.
Copyright 1990 American Psychological Society

ABSTRACT

 Abstract

The question of when people rely on stereotypic preconceptions in judging others was investigated in two studies. As a person's motivation or ability to process information systematically is diminished, the person may rely to an increasing extent on stereotypes, when available, as a way of simplifying the task of generating a response. It was hypothesized that circadian variations in arousal levels would be related to social perceivers' propensity to stereotype others by virtue of their effects on motivation and processing capacity. In support of this hypothesis, subjects exhibited stereotypic biases in their judgments to a much greater extent when the judgments were rendered at a nonoptimal time of day (i.e., in the morning for "night" people and in the evening for "morning people"). In Study One, this pattern was found in probability judgments concerning personal characteristics: in Study Two, the pattern was obtained in perceptions of guilt in allegations of student misbehavior. Results generalized over a range of different types of social stereotypes and suggest that biological processes should be considered in attempts to conceptualize the determinants of stereotyping.


Received 10/12/89; Accepted 4/3/90

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-9280.1990.tb00226.x About DOI

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