Hogg 2006
Hogg 2006
Hogg 2006
Abstract
Two studies examined the eVects of self-uncertainty and ingroup entitativity on group identiWcation. From uncertainty reduction theory (Hogg, 2000), it was hypothesized that people would identify most strongly with their group if they felt self-conceptually uncertain
and the group was highly entitative. Study 1 was a Weld experiment (N D 114) in which the perceived entitativity of participants political
party was measured, and self-uncertainty was primed (high vs. low). Study 2 was a laboratory experiment (N D 89) with ad hoc non-interactive groups. Uncertainty was primed as in Study 1, but perceived entitativity was manipulated. In both cases the dependent variable was
a multi-item measure of group identiWcation. The hypothesis was fully supported in both studiesparticipants identiWed more strongly
when they were uncertain and the group was highly entitative. Implications of this research for the role of uncertainty and social identity
in extremism, orthodoxy, and ideological belief systems are discussed.
2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Social identity; Uncertainty reduction; Entitativity; Intergroup behavior; Extremism
0022-1031/$ - see front matter 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.jesp.2005.12.008
tral to ones sense of self (e.g., Cameron, 2004). IdentiWcation generates group behaviors; for example ethnocentrism,
conformity, cohesion, stereotyping, intergroup competition
and discrimination (Hogg & Abrams, 1988).
Why and when do people identify with groups, and what
properties of groups facilitate or strengthen identiWcation?
From a social identity perspective, identiWcation may be
motivated by self-enhancement (Tajfel & Turner, 1979),
optimal distinctiveness (Brewer, 1991), and uncertainty
reduction. In this article, we focus on the latterthe motivational role of subjective uncertainty reduction in group
identiWcation, as described by uncertainty reduction theory
(Hogg, 2000). We test the proposition that uncertainty, particularly self-conceptual uncertainty, motivates identiWcation, but that people prefer to identify with groups that are
clearly deWned and distinctive entities.
Although some uncertainty in our lives may be exciting
(we like surprises), too much is uncomfortable, particularly if it is uncertainty about oneself in social context or
about things that directly matter to or reXect on self-con-
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The eVectiveness of the self-uncertainty prime was conWrmed in a pilot study1. However we also had two independent raters, from the same population as the participants,
read what each participant had written in response to the
uncertainty prime and indicate how certain or uncertain
they felt that participant would have felt at the time (1 certain, 9 uncertain). Interrater reliability was signiWcant
(r (111) D .25, p D .008) so we averaged the raters ratings.
One-way ANOVA revealed a signiWcant main eVect for
uncertaintyhigh uncertainty participants were rated as
feeling more self-uncertain (M D 6.55) than low uncertainty
participants (M D 3.72), F (1, 109) D 285.88, p < .001.
To test the experimental hypothesis a step-wise multiple
regression with uncertainty and entitativity (Step 1) and
their interaction (Step 2) as predictors, was performed on
identiWcation. Following Aiken and West (1991), predictors
were centered and simple slopes analyses conducted for the
signiWcant interaction.
The regression was signiWcant at Step 1, R2 D .11,
2
R adj D .09, F (2, 109) D 6.38, p D .002. Entitativity was the
only signiWcant predictor, D .33, t D 3.74, p < .001identiWcation increased with increasing entitativity. At Step 2 the
interaction of entitativity and uncertainty signiWcantly
improved prediction of identiWcation, R2ch D .05, Fch (1,
108) D 5.83, p D .017, D .21, t D 2.42, p D .017. Since uncertainty signiWcantly moderated the main eVect of entitativity
on identiWcation, we examined and plotted the simple slope
of entitativity at low (1 SD below the mean) and high (1 SD
above the mean) levels of uncertainty (see Fig. 1). Entitativity signiWcantly increased identiWcation under high ( D .55,
t D 4.25, p < .001) but not low uncertainty ( D .12, t D 0.96).
Simple slopes analyses with entitativity as the moderator
revealed the slopes for uncertainty to be non-signiWcant at
high ( D .20, t D 1.60) and low ( D .23, t D 1.81,
p D .073) levels of group entitativity.
Discussion
Study 2
Study 2 adopted a computerized minimal group paradigm that has been used in past research to make participants believe they are in a small discussion or task-oriented
group that does not interact face-to-face but communicates
and exchanges information via computer (e.g., Reid &
Hogg, 2005). This allowed us to provide credible feedback
that their group was high or low in entitativity, prime them
as in Study 1 to feel more or less uncertain about themselves, and then measure how strongly they identiWed with
the groupusing almost identical measures to Study 1. As
for Study 1, we predicted that identiWcation would be strongest among participants who both felt uncertain and
believed that their group had high entitativity.
1
To establish the eVectiveness of the self-uncertainty prime 29 participants, from the same population as the experiment, were given the high or
low uncertainty prime, and worked through a list of 74 neutral personality
traits (from Anderson, 1968). For each trait they circled yes or no to indicate if the trait applied to them or not. They believed they had a few minutes to do this, but were stopped after one minutenone had completed
the list. We reasoned that saying yes to (aYrming) these neutral items
conveyed more concrete information about self (positive statements of
who you are) than saying no (simply stating who you are not). We expected high uncertainty participants to respond yes less frequently (less
certain about self) than low uncertainty participants (more certain about
self). Our expectation was conWrmedhigh uncertainty participants circled a signiWcantly smaller proportion of items yes (M D 55.25%) than
did low uncertainty participants (M D 64.36%), t (1, 28) D 2.16, p D .04.
9
8
Identification
7
6
High
uncertainty
Low
uncertainty
5
4
3
2
1
Low
High
Ingroup entitativity
Fig. 1. Study 1, identiWcation as a function of ingroup entitativity, under
conditions of low and high uncertainty.
Method
Design and participants
Participants were 39 male and 50 female undergraduates
(N D 89) at a large Australian university (17- to 28-years,
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9
8
6.98
Identification
7
6
4.61
5
4
4.72
3.93
Low uncertainty
High uncertainty
3
2
1
Low
High
Entitativity
2
The interaction was also signiWcant when age was not a covariate, F (1,
85) D 4.02, p D .048.
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