ingroup
Psychology
(noun)
The social group that one belongs to.
Sociology
(noun)
It is a social group to which a person psychologically identifies themselves as a member
Examples of ingroup in the following topics:
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Prejudice
- Negative prejudice is rarely seen in response to one's own group, or ingroup.
- Researchers have found that ingroup favoritism, or preference for members of the group one belongs to, can occur even when the group had no prior social meaning.
- Experiments have shown that when participants were assigned to groups based on something as trivial as a coin toss, those participants exhibited ingroup favoritism, giving preferential treatment to members of their own group.
- The outgroup homogeneity effect is the perception that members of an outgroup are more similar than members of the ingroup.
- This image emphasizes the individuality of the ingroup (America) and the homogeneity of the outgroup (Slavik communists), demonstrating the principle of outgroup homogeneity.
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Stereotypes in Everyday Life
- In other words, the creation of an us versus them mentality divides the world into an ingroup and an outgroup.
- An ingroup is the group with which one identifies; an outgroup is everyone else.
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Cultural Influences on Perception
- The Ingroup bias shows a preference for individuals who are in one's own group affiliation.
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Social Identity Theory
- To take the most extreme example, in some violent conflict such as a war, the members of the opposite group - the outgroup - are treated as identical and completely different to the those people in your group - the ingroup - which is made up of distinct individuals.