2023
DOI: 10.1111/jasp.13006
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Tertiary transfer effect (TTE) of contact with sexual minorities in a sample of Colombian heterosexual and gay participants

María Camila Navarro,
Ana María Chamorro Coneo,
Nathalia Quiroz Molinares
et al.

Abstract: Contact with sexually diverse people predicts attitude transformation towards the whole group membership (i.e., the primary transfer effect) and may potentially generalize to other group memberships (i.e., The secondary transfer effect). However, the effect of contact may extend beyond this known attitudinal transformation, comprising also cognitive growth and likely impact other types of psychological outcomes or Tertiary Transfer Effect (TTE). This study used a cross‐sectional design with a convenient sample… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…In support of the cognitive liberalisation hypothesis, Hodson and colleagues (2018) present a comprehensive literature review of intergroup contact effects on criteria related and unrelated to intergroup relations, including for instance ideologies and worldviews, problem solving capacities, cognitive flexibility and creativity. And indeed, subsequent research on tertiary transfer effects found cross-sectional effects of intergroup contact on well-being (Navarro et al, 2023), crosssectional and experimental effects of (imagined) positive contact on conspiracy beliefs (Jolley et al, 2023), cross-sectional effects of positive intergroup contact on academic self-efficacy (McKeown et al, 2024) and theory of mind (Devine et al, 2024), and cross-sectional as well as longitudinal effects of intergroup contact on pro-environmental attitudes, mediated by social dominance orientation (Meleady et al, 2020).…”
mentioning
confidence: 97%
“…In support of the cognitive liberalisation hypothesis, Hodson and colleagues (2018) present a comprehensive literature review of intergroup contact effects on criteria related and unrelated to intergroup relations, including for instance ideologies and worldviews, problem solving capacities, cognitive flexibility and creativity. And indeed, subsequent research on tertiary transfer effects found cross-sectional effects of intergroup contact on well-being (Navarro et al, 2023), crosssectional and experimental effects of (imagined) positive contact on conspiracy beliefs (Jolley et al, 2023), cross-sectional effects of positive intergroup contact on academic self-efficacy (McKeown et al, 2024) and theory of mind (Devine et al, 2024), and cross-sectional as well as longitudinal effects of intergroup contact on pro-environmental attitudes, mediated by social dominance orientation (Meleady et al, 2020).…”
mentioning
confidence: 97%