Direct Contact as a Moderator of Extended Contact Effects: Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Impact on Outgroup Attitudes, Behavioral Intentions, and Attitude Certainty

Oliver Christ, Miles Hewstone, Nicole Tausch, Ulrich Wagner, Alberto Voci, Joanne Hughes, Ed Cairns

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Cross-group friendships (the most effective form of direct contact) and extended contact (i.e., knowing ingroup members who have outgroup friends) constitute two of the most important means of improving outgroup attitudes. Using cross-sectional and longitudinal samples from different intergroup contexts, this research demonstrates that extended contact is most effective when individuals live in segregated neighborhoods having only few, or no, direct friendships with outgroup members. Moreover, by including measures of attitudes and behavioral intentions the authors showed the broader impact of these forms of contact, and, by assessing attitude certainty as one dimension of attitude strength, they tested whether extended contact can lead not only to more positive but also to stronger outgroup orientations. Cross-sectional data showed that direct contact was more strongly related to attitude certainty than was extended contact, but longitudinal data showed both forms of contact affected attitude certainty in the long run.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1662-1674
Number of pages13
JournalPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin
Volume36
Issue number12
Early online date21 Oct 2010
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2010

Keywords

  • extended contact
  • direct contact
  • behavioral intentions
  • outgroup attitudes
  • attitude strength
  • INTERGROUP CONTACT
  • GROUP FRIENDSHIPS
  • NORTHERN-IRELAND
  • MEDIATING ROLE
  • PREJUDICE
  • STRENGTH
  • ANXIETY
  • REDUCTION
  • GERMANY

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