@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00019192, author = {TAKAMATSU, Reina and TAKAI, Jiro and 高松, 礼奈 and 高井, 次郎}, journal = {名古屋大学大学院教育発達科学研究科紀要. 心理発達科学}, month = {Dec}, note = {To examine the vicissitudes of dehumanized perception, participants in the threat condition were led to think that a nation “X” hinders Japan’s economic advances in foreign markets. In addition to the experimental manipulation, data were collected at two points to see whether a (real) territorial dispute affects mind perception of members of the out-group. Results suggest that extreme prejudice is not an ordinary phenomenon, but a territorial dispute is one detrimental cause of dehumanized perception that may be used for justification of wrongdoing. It was also found that the high-empathy group was more likely to see human characteristics in the target than did the low- and medium-empathy groups irrespective of the time and condition. To encourage adaptive ways to deal with intergroup conflicts, empathy may be one of the key ingredients.}, pages = {69--76}, title = {Out-group mind perception before and after territorial conflict: Empathy as a key to reducing extreme prejudice}, volume = {61}, year = {2014} }