Comparing story reading and video watching as two distinct forms of vicarious contact: An experimental intervention among elementary school children

Research has shown that vicarious contact, that is observing an interaction between ingroup and outgroup members, can improve intergroup relations. Although vicarious contact has been operationalized in different ways, mainly via story reading or video watching, an experimental comparison of these d...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of social psychology 2021-01, Vol.60 (1), p.74-94
Hauptverfasser: Cocco, Veronica Margherita, Bisagno, Elisa, Di Bernardo, Gian Antonio, Cadamuro, Alessia, Riboldi, Sara Debora, Crapolicchio, Eleonora, Trifiletti, Elena, Stathi, Sofia, Vezzali, Loris
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Research has shown that vicarious contact, that is observing an interaction between ingroup and outgroup members, can improve intergroup relations. Although vicarious contact has been operationalized in different ways, mainly via story reading or video watching, an experimental comparison of these different strategies is still missing. We conducted a school intervention with the aim of comparing the two most used forms of vicarious contact, namely story reading and video watching. Elementary schoolchildren without disabilities (N = 292) were assigned to one of three different conditions: reading a story; watching a video; control. In the two vicarious contact conditions, participants read or watched the story of a child with disability becoming friends with children without disabilities; in the control condition, participants only completed the dependent measures. Results revealed that, in general, both vicarious contact conditions were equally effective in improving outgroup attitudes and behavioural intentions. In addition, they operated with the same strength through the same underlying processes (IOS, ingroup norms). We discuss theoretical and practical implications in the context of vicarious contact as a prejudice‐reduction intervention.
ISSN:0144-6665
2044-8309
DOI:10.1111/bjso.12404