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@article{ Cuddy2007,
 title = {Aid in the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina: Inferences of Secondary Emotions and Intergroup Helping},
 author = {Cuddy, Amy J. C. and Rock, Mindi S. and Norton, Michael I.},
 journal = {Group Processes & Intergroup Relations},
 number = {1},
 pages = {107-118},
 volume = {10},
 year = {2007},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1177/1368430207071344},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-228171},
 abstract = {This research examines inferences about the emotional states of ingroup and outgroup                victims after a natural disaster, and whether these inferences predict intergroup                helping. Two weeks after Hurricane Katrina struck the southern United States, White                and non-White participants were asked to infer the emotional states of an                individualized Black or White victim, and were asked to report their intentions to                help such victims. Overall, participants believed that an outgroup victim                experienced fewer secondary, ‘uniquely human’ emotions (e.g.                anguish, mourning, remorse) than an ingroup victim. The extent to which participants                did infer secondary emotions about outgroup victims, however, predicted their                helping intentions; in other words, those participants who did not dehumanize                outgroup victims were the individuals most likely to report intentions to volunteer                for hurricane relief efforts. This investigation extends prior research by: (1)                demonstrating infraglobalhumanization of individualized outgroup members (as opposed                to aggregated outgroups); (2) examining infrahumanization via inferred emotional                states (as opposed to attributions of emotions as stereotypic traits); and (3)                identifying a relationship between infra-humanization of outgroup members and                reduced intergroup helping.},
}