To whom thou art bound: Bicultural identity integration moderates the influence of conspiracy beliefs on Chinese Americans’ ingroup bias

Endorsing conspiracy beliefs about an outgroup typically fosters ingroup bias. However, the response of bicultural individuals to conspiracy theories about one of their ingroups remains understudied. We posited that bicultural individuals’ display of ingroup bias in such situations hinges on their l...

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Main Authors: TAN, Edison, CHENG, Chi-ying, LEUNG, Angela K. Y., WEE, Sheila X. R.
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2024
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4018
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spelling sg-smu-ink.soss_research-52762024-09-09T03:06:03Z To whom thou art bound: Bicultural identity integration moderates the influence of conspiracy beliefs on Chinese Americans’ ingroup bias TAN, Edison CHENG, Chi-ying LEUNG, Angela K. Y. WEE, Sheila X. R. Endorsing conspiracy beliefs about an outgroup typically fosters ingroup bias. However, the response of bicultural individuals to conspiracy theories about one of their ingroups remains understudied. We posited that bicultural individuals’ display of ingroup bias in such situations hinges on their levels of bicultural identity integration (BII). Two studies involving Chinese American participants revealed that conspiracy beliefs about China were associated with lower Chinese ingroup bias among those with higher BII levels. In Study 1, high BII Chinese Americans who endorsed conspiracy theories about China reported less favorable perceptions of the Chinese ingroup, but not among low BII Chinese Americans. Study 2 replicated findings in Study 1 in that high (vs. low) BII Chinese Americans with higher conspiracy beliefs about China were less willing to allocate monetary resources to a fictitious Chinese charity and reported lower Chinese patriotism. This research contributes to the identity integration literature by illustrating how bicultural individuals with varying BII levels respond differently to geopolitical tensions in the context of conspiracy beliefs. 2024-08-07T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4018 info:doi/10.1177/00220221241263 Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University biculturalism bicultural identity integration (BII) conspiracy belief ingroup bias Chinese American COVID-19 Asian Studies Sociology of Culture
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic biculturalism
bicultural identity integration (BII)
conspiracy belief
ingroup bias
Chinese American
COVID-19
Asian Studies
Sociology of Culture
spellingShingle biculturalism
bicultural identity integration (BII)
conspiracy belief
ingroup bias
Chinese American
COVID-19
Asian Studies
Sociology of Culture
TAN, Edison
CHENG, Chi-ying
LEUNG, Angela K. Y.
WEE, Sheila X. R.
To whom thou art bound: Bicultural identity integration moderates the influence of conspiracy beliefs on Chinese Americans’ ingroup bias
description Endorsing conspiracy beliefs about an outgroup typically fosters ingroup bias. However, the response of bicultural individuals to conspiracy theories about one of their ingroups remains understudied. We posited that bicultural individuals’ display of ingroup bias in such situations hinges on their levels of bicultural identity integration (BII). Two studies involving Chinese American participants revealed that conspiracy beliefs about China were associated with lower Chinese ingroup bias among those with higher BII levels. In Study 1, high BII Chinese Americans who endorsed conspiracy theories about China reported less favorable perceptions of the Chinese ingroup, but not among low BII Chinese Americans. Study 2 replicated findings in Study 1 in that high (vs. low) BII Chinese Americans with higher conspiracy beliefs about China were less willing to allocate monetary resources to a fictitious Chinese charity and reported lower Chinese patriotism. This research contributes to the identity integration literature by illustrating how bicultural individuals with varying BII levels respond differently to geopolitical tensions in the context of conspiracy beliefs.
format text
author TAN, Edison
CHENG, Chi-ying
LEUNG, Angela K. Y.
WEE, Sheila X. R.
author_facet TAN, Edison
CHENG, Chi-ying
LEUNG, Angela K. Y.
WEE, Sheila X. R.
author_sort TAN, Edison
title To whom thou art bound: Bicultural identity integration moderates the influence of conspiracy beliefs on Chinese Americans’ ingroup bias
title_short To whom thou art bound: Bicultural identity integration moderates the influence of conspiracy beliefs on Chinese Americans’ ingroup bias
title_full To whom thou art bound: Bicultural identity integration moderates the influence of conspiracy beliefs on Chinese Americans’ ingroup bias
title_fullStr To whom thou art bound: Bicultural identity integration moderates the influence of conspiracy beliefs on Chinese Americans’ ingroup bias
title_full_unstemmed To whom thou art bound: Bicultural identity integration moderates the influence of conspiracy beliefs on Chinese Americans’ ingroup bias
title_sort to whom thou art bound: bicultural identity integration moderates the influence of conspiracy beliefs on chinese americans’ ingroup bias
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2024
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4018
_version_ 1814047883694964736