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Dive into the research topics where Donna M. Garcia is active.

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Featured researches published by Donna M. Garcia.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2007

Culture, gender, and the self: Variations and impact of social comparison processes

Serge Guimond; Nyla R. Branscombe; Sophie Brunot; Abraham P. Buunk; Armand Chatard; Michel Désert; Donna M. Garcia; Shamsul Haque; Delphine Martinot; Vincent Yzerbyt

Psychological differences between women and men, far from being invariant as a biological explanation would suggest, fluctuate in magnitude across cultures. Moreover, contrary to the implications of some theoretical perspectives, gender differences in personality, values, and emotions are not smaller, but larger, in American and European cultures, in which greater progress has been made toward gender equality. This research on gender differences in self-construals involving 950 participants from 5 nations/cultures (France, Belgium, the Netherlands, the United States, and Malaysia) illustrates how variations in social comparison processes across cultures can explain why gender differences are stronger in Western cultures. Gender differences in the self are a product of self-stereotyping, which occurs when between-gender social comparisons are made. These social comparisons are more likely, and exert a greater impact, in Western nations. Both correlational and experimental evidence supports this explanation.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2005

Perceivers' Responses to In-Group and Out-Group Members Who Blame a Negative Outcome on Discrimination.

Donna M. Garcia; April Horstman Reser; Rachel B. Amo; Sandrine Redersdorff; Nyla R. Branscombe

The authors extend recent research concerning the social costs of claiming discrimination by examining men’s and women’s responses to in-group and out-group targets who either blamed a failing grade on discrimination or answer quality. Although participants generally responded more negatively to targets who blamed discrimination, rather than answer quality, dislike was greatest and gender group identification was lowest when participants evaluated an in-group target. Moreover, an in-group target who claimed discrimination was perceived as avoiding personal responsibility for outcomes to a greater extent than was a similar out-group target. Perceptions that the target avoided outcome responsibility by claiming discrimination were shown to mediate the relationship between attribution type and dislike of the in-group target. The authors discuss their results in terms of intragroup processes and suggest that social costs may especially accrue for in-group members when claiming discrimination has implications for the in-group’s social identity.


Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology | 2015

Ethnic Variation in Gender-STEM Stereotypes and STEM Participation: An Intersectional Approach

Laurie T. O'Brien; Alison Blodorn; Glenn Adams; Donna M. Garcia; Elliott Hammer

Stereotypes associating men and masculine traits with science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields are ubiquitous, but the relative strength of these stereotypes varies considerably across cultures. The present research applies an intersectional approach to understanding ethnic variation in gender-STEM stereotypes and STEM participation within an American university context. African American college women participated in STEM majors at higher rates than European American college women (Study 1, Study 2, and Study 4). Furthermore, African American women had weaker implicit gender-STEM stereotypes than European American women (Studies 2-4), and ethnic differences in implicit gender-STEM stereotypes partially mediated ethnic differences in STEM participation (Study 2 and Study 4). Although African American men had weaker implicit gender-STEM stereotypes than European American men (Study 4), ethnic differences between men in STEM participation were generally small (Study 1) or nonsignificant (Study 4). We discuss the implications of an intersectional approach for understanding the relationship between gender and STEM participation.


Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology | 2006

The psychology of engagement with indigenous identities: a cultural perspective.

Glenn Adams; Stephaine A. Fryberg; Donna M. Garcia; Elizabeth Delgado-Torres

In a questionnaire study among 124 students at Haskell Indian Nations University, the authors investigated the hypothesis that engagement with Indigenous identity--assessed along three dimensions including degree (identification scale), content (panethnic or tribal nation), and context (reservation or nonreservation)--can serve as a psychological resource for well-being and liberation from oppression. Consistent with this hypothesis, degree of identification was positively correlated with community efficacy and perception of racism. Apparently inconsistent with this hypothesis, degree of identification among students who had resided on a reservation was negatively correlated with the Social Self-Esteem subscale of the Current Thoughts Scale. Rather than evidence against the identity-as-resource hypothesis, this pattern may reflect the cultural grounding of self-esteem and tools designed to measure it.


British Journal of Social Psychology | 2005

Opposition to redistributive employment policies for women: the role of policy experience and group interest.

Donna M. Garcia; Serge Desmarais; Nyla R. Branscombe; Stephanie S. Gee

We examined whether group interest affected ideological beliefs and attitudes towards redistributive policies among men and women. We found that group interest influenced meritocratic and neo-sexist beliefs and support for gender-based affirmative action and comparable worth policies. Men and women differed in their ideological beliefs and support for the redistributive policies only when they had conscious experience with these policies. Those with policy experience expressed policy attitudes that corresponded with their gender groups interests, while those lacking such experience did not. We also noted group interest effects within each gender: men who had conscious experience with the policies expressed more opposition and greater neo-sexism and meritocratic beliefs than did men who were not consciously experienced with these policies. In contrast, consciously experienced women expressed more policy support than did their not consciously experienced counterparts. Overall, our findings indicate that group interest is an important determinant of policy attitudes and related ideological beliefs.


Journal of Experimental Social Psychology | 2006

The detrimental effects of a suggestion of sexism in an instruction situation

Glenn Adams; Donna M. Garcia; Valerie Purdie-Vaughns; Claude M. Steele


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2011

The merit of meritocracy.

Son Hing Ls; Bobocel Dr; Mark P. Zanna; Donna M. Garcia; Gee Ss; Orazietti K


European Journal of Social Psychology | 2009

Women's reactions to ingroup members who protest discriminatory treatment: The importance of beliefs about inequality and response appropriateness

Donna M. Garcia; Michael T. Schmitt; Nyla R. Branscombe; Naomi Ellemers


European Journal of Social Psychology | 2006

Categorizing at the group-level in response to intragroup social comparisons: A self-categorization theory integration of self-evaluation and social identity motives.

Michael T. Schmitt; Nyla R. Branscombe; Paul J. Silvia; Donna M. Garcia; Russell Spears


Archive | 2005

Social Comparison and Social Psychology: Attitudes toward redistributive social policies: the effects of social comparisons and policy experience

Donna M. Garcia; Nyla R. Branscombe; Serge Desmarais; Stephanie S. Gee

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Michel Désert

Blaise Pascal University

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Serge Guimond

Blaise Pascal University

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Paul J. Silvia

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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