Musical taste and ingroup favouritism

Musical taste is thought to function as a social ‘badge’ of group membership, contributingto an individual’s sense of social identity. Following from this, social identity theory predictsthat individuals should perceive and behave more favourably towards those perceived to sharetheir musical taste t...

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Main Authors: Lonsdale, A., North, Adrian
Format: Journal Article
Published: Sage Publications Ltd. 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4690
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author Lonsdale, A.
North, Adrian
author_facet Lonsdale, A.
North, Adrian
author_sort Lonsdale, A.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Musical taste is thought to function as a social ‘badge’ of group membership, contributingto an individual’s sense of social identity. Following from this, social identity theory predictsthat individuals should perceive and behave more favourably towards those perceived to sharetheir musical taste than towards those who do not. The fi ndings of two studies supported thesepredictions. The fi rst showed that stereotypes of the fans of different musical styles demonstrateingroup favouritism, and the second study used the minimal group paradigm to show thatindividuals allocate greater rewards to those believed to share their musical taste. This suggeststhat those who share our musical taste are likely to be considered ingroup members, and shouldbe subject to ingroup favouritism.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2009
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-46902017-09-13T14:46:23Z Musical taste and ingroup favouritism Lonsdale, A. North, Adrian Musical taste is thought to function as a social ‘badge’ of group membership, contributingto an individual’s sense of social identity. Following from this, social identity theory predictsthat individuals should perceive and behave more favourably towards those perceived to sharetheir musical taste than towards those who do not. The fi ndings of two studies supported thesepredictions. The fi rst showed that stereotypes of the fans of different musical styles demonstrateingroup favouritism, and the second study used the minimal group paradigm to show thatindividuals allocate greater rewards to those believed to share their musical taste. This suggeststhat those who share our musical taste are likely to be considered ingroup members, and shouldbe subject to ingroup favouritism. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4690 10.1177/1368430209102842 Sage Publications Ltd. fulltext
spellingShingle Lonsdale, A.
North, Adrian
Musical taste and ingroup favouritism
title Musical taste and ingroup favouritism
title_full Musical taste and ingroup favouritism
title_fullStr Musical taste and ingroup favouritism
title_full_unstemmed Musical taste and ingroup favouritism
title_short Musical taste and ingroup favouritism
title_sort musical taste and ingroup favouritism
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4690