2 research outputs found

    Effects of attitude base and affective-cognitive consistency on intergroup instrumental behaviors in Study 2.

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    <p>This figure was plotted by using the unstandardized regression weights with affective-cognitive consistency along the abscissa at <u>+</u> 1 <i>SD</i> from the mean. Lower affective-cognitive consistency scores signified higher affective-cognitive consistency of group attitudes. Similarly, lower attitude-behavior consistency scores indicated a stronger relation between attitudes and behaviors. Results representing the moderating role of affective-cognitive consistency in the effects of affectively-based and cognitively-based attitudes on intergroup instrumental behaviors show that cognitively-based attitudes predicted intergroup instrumental behaviors more strongly than affectively-based attitudes only when affective-cognitive consistency was high.</p

    Effects of attitude base and affective-cognitive consistency on intergroup consummatory behaviors in Study 1.

    No full text
    <p>This figure was plotted by using the unstandardized regression weights with affective-cognitive consistency along the abscissa at <u>+</u> 1 <i>SD</i> from the mean. Lower affective-cognitive consistency scores signified higher affective-cognitive consistency of group attitudes. Similarly, lower attitude-behavior consistency scores indicated a stronger relation between attitudes and behaviors. Results show that affectively-based attitudes predicted intergroup consummatory behaviors more strongly than cognitively-based attitudes regardless of affective-cognitive consistency.</p
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