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Bounded openness: The effect of openness to experience on intolerance is moderated by target group conventionality

Authors :
Christine Reyna
John R. Chambers
Jarret T. Crawford
Mark J. Brandt
Geoffrey Wetherell
Department of Social Psychology
Source :
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 109(3), 549-568. AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Openness to experience is consistently associated with tolerance. We suggest that tests of the association between openness to experience and tolerance have heretofore been incomplete because they have primarily focused on prejudice toward unconventional target groups. We test (a) the individual difference perspective, which predicts that because people who are high in openness are more open to diverse and dissimilar people and ideas, they will express more tolerance than people who are low in openness and (b) the worldview conflict perspective, which predicts that people high and low in openness will both be intolerant toward those with different worldviews. Four studies, using both conventional and unconventional target groups, find support for an integrative perspective. People high in openness do appear more tolerant of diverse worldviews compared with people low in openness; however, at the same time, people both high and low in openness are more intolerant of groups whose worldviews conflict with their own. These findings highlight the need to consider how individual difference variables and features of the target groups may interact in important ways to influence the expression of prejudice.

Details

ISSN :
19391315 and 00223514
Volume :
109
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of personality and social psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....152c21298b8e980eb5b12599dfd49bd4