Abstract
Drawing upon uncertainty-identity theory, we argue that self-uncertainty creates a motivated mindset in which people desire to have their social identity validated thorough inclusion, and that this transforms the meaning of group warmth and competence to cue inclusion. US College students (N = 289) participated in an on-line experiment in which self-uncertainty and the perceived warmth and competence of their college were primed, and group identification was measured as the dependent variable. As predicted, the three-way interaction significantly affected group identification. Specifically, uncertainty weakened identification with cold-but-competent groups. We also found that uncertainty strengthened identification with cold-and-incompetent groups. This research highlights the preference for certain group attributes under uncertainty.
Notes
1. A pilot study (N = 58) showed that while the relationships between inclusion and warmth did not differ between high and low uncertainty conditions, r’s = .65 vs. .56 (z = 0.51, p = .61), the relationship between inclusion and competence was significantly weaker under high than low uncertainty, rs = .58 vs. .07 (z = 2.14, p = .03).