The Impact of Terrorist Attack News on Moral Intuitions and Outgroup Prejudice

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Hofer, Matthias, Prabhu, Sujay, Grall, Clare, Novotny, Eric Robert, Hahn, Lindsay, Klebig, Brian
In: Mass communication & society, 20, 2017, 6
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
ISSN: 1520-5436
published in: Mass communication & society
Language: English
Collection: OLC SSG Medien- / Kommunikationswissenschaft
Table of Contents

Using logic suggested by the model of intuitive morality and exemplars, we examined the impact of exposure to terrorist attack news coverage on the salience of moral intuitions and prosocial behavioral intentions toward outgroup members. In an experiment, participants were randomly assigned to watch news of the 2015 Paris terrorist attacks or a control news story. Afterward, we measured the salience of five moral intuitions (sensitivity to care, fairness, loyalty, authority, and purity) and the participants' prejudice (i.e., the lack of intentions to help outgroup members). Results showed that exposure to terrorist attack news (a) increased the salience of respect for authority and subsequently (b) reduced prosocial behavioral intentions toward outgroup members. Closer inspection revealed that authority salience mediated the effect of terrorist news exposure on these behavioral intentions toward outgroup members. In a second study using the same design as in the first study, we ensured that the ingroup and the outgroup addressed in the first study were indeed perceived differently on dimensions of ingroup membership.