The Two-Dimensions-Five-Components Structure of In-group Identification is Invariant across Various Identification Patterns in Different Social Groups

DOI

In-group identification has been suggested to consist of two-dimensions (group based self-definition and self-investment) that hierarchically relate to five lower order components (individual self-stereotyping, in-group homogeneity, satisfaction, solidarity, and centrality). The goal of the present research was to test the generalizability of the two-dimensions-five-components structure of in-group identification (Leach et al.’s 2008) across identities with which people show converging and diverging group based self-definition and self-investment. We manipulated the mean level and the linear correlational strength of the two identification dimensions by asking participants to indicate in-groups to which respective identification criteria apply. Confirmatory factor analyses showed that the two-dimensions-five-components model of in-group identification fits both converging and diverging identification patterns better than alternative models, indicating generalizability of the model across various identification patterns.

Laborexperiment

Laboratory experiment

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.7802/1599
Metadata Access https://api.datacite.org/dois/10.7802/1599
Provenance
Creator Roth, Jenny
Publisher GESIS Data Archive
Contributor Barth, Markus; Mazziotta, Agostino
Publication Year 2018
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Dataset
Format text/x-spss-syntax; application/x-spss-sav
Size 13286; 410031
Version 1
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage Deutschland / DE; Germany / DE