Alcohol consumption increases bias to shoot at Middle Eastern but not White targets

Date

2015

Authors

Schofield, Timothy
Unkelbach, Christian
Denson, Thomas

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Volume Title

Publisher

Sage Publications Inc

Abstract

Alcohol has been implicated in intergroup aggression and hostility. The effect of consuming alcohol relative to a placebo on hostile cognitive biases toward a social category typically stereotyped as threatening and hostile (i.e., Middle Eastern men) was tested. Undergraduates (N = 81) consumed either an intoxicating dose of alcohol (BrAC = .05% by vol.) or placebo. Then, they played a shooter game in which they were asked to shoot at targets holding guns, but not at targets holding harmless objects. Half of the targets were White and half were Middle Eastern. As predicted, alcohol consumption, relative to a placebo, increased participants’ bias to shoot Middle Eastern targets, but did not affect the shooter bias against White targets. Findings suggest that alcohol may heighten aggressive biases toward outgroups stereotyped as threatening and hostile.

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Citation

Source

Group Processes and Intergroup Relations

Type

Journal article

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Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31