Connections
Stereotyping in Everyday Life
The classic studies by Asch and by Hamilton and Gifford demonstrate that researchers
can manipulate people's impressions of others by controlling the information
presented to them. This works in the laboratory, but what about in everyday
life?
The evidence suggests that these same principles operate in every social situation,
as we evaluate written, oral, and behavioral information about other people and
form impressions of their abilities and personalities.
Because humans have limited memory capacities, and because the information we have
about other people is often incomplete or flawed, we often fall back on stereotypes
generalized beliefs about a group of people that distinguish those people from
others.