The Integration of Perceived Threat, Media Influence, and Intergroup Anxiety: An Investigation into Stigma Surrounding the Mexican Immigration Debate among U.S. Native-Born College Students

A growing body of research has investigated the stigma surrounding immigration, the impact it has on individual and group level attitudes, interactions, and well-being, as well the role of individual factors and media influences. The current study aimed to build on this research by exploring the imp...

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Other Authors: Martinez, Jadelyn Kuuipo (author), Dong, Shengli (professor directing dissertation), Tillman, Kathryn H. (university representative), Osborn, Debra S., 1968- (committee member), Becker, Martin Swanbrow (committee member), Florida State University (degree granting institution), College of Education (degree granting college), Department of Educational Psychology and Learning Systems (degree granting department)
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Florida State University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A777037/datastream/TN/view/Integration%20of%20Perceived%20Threat,%20Media%20Influence,%20and%20Intergroup%20Anxiety.jpg
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spelling ftfloridasu:oai:diginole.lib.fsu.edu:fsu_777037 2024-06-09T07:46:29+00:00 The Integration of Perceived Threat, Media Influence, and Intergroup Anxiety: An Investigation into Stigma Surrounding the Mexican Immigration Debate among U.S. Native-Born College Students Martinez, Jadelyn Kuuipo (author) Dong, Shengli (professor directing dissertation) Tillman, Kathryn H. (university representative) Osborn, Debra S., 1968- (committee member) Becker, Martin Swanbrow (committee member) Florida State University (degree granting institution) College of Education (degree granting college) Department of Educational Psychology and Learning Systems (degree granting department) 2020 computer online resource 1 online resource (170 pages) application/pdf https://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A777037/datastream/TN/view/Integration%20of%20Perceived%20Threat,%20Media%20Influence,%20and%20Intergroup%20Anxiety.jpg English eng Florida State University fsu:777037 iid: 2020_Summer_Fall_Martinez_fsu_0071E_15694 https://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A777037/datastream/TN/view/Integration%20of%20Perceived%20Threat,%20Media%20Influence,%20and%20Intergroup%20Anxiety.jpg Counseling psychology Educational psychology Multimedia systems Text doctoral thesis 2020 ftfloridasu 2024-05-10T08:08:10Z A growing body of research has investigated the stigma surrounding immigration, the impact it has on individual and group level attitudes, interactions, and well-being, as well the role of individual factors and media influences. The current study aimed to build on this research by exploring the impact of perceived threat on U.S. native-born college students’ endorsed levels of intergroup anxiety and attitudes towards Mexican immigrants specifically. Additionally, the potential moderating roles of media influence, educational level, and personal connection were explored. The design of this study was informed by a combined theoretical framework of Intergroup Threat Theory’s (ITT; Stephan & Stephan, 2000) three dimensions of perceived threat- economic, symbolic, and physical- and cultivation theory (Morgan, Shananhan, & Signorielli, 2009). Consistent with past research, this study focused on the experiences of native-born U.S. college students (n = 393) who were of voting age (18+). The participants were presented with vignettes to prime one of the perceived threat dimensions or the control no threat condition. A modified version of the Attitude Towards Immigrants Scale (ATI; Bae, 2016) was used to measure attitudes towards Mexican immigrants, while the Self Other Intergroup Anxiety Scale (SOIAS; Greenland, Xenias, & Maio, 2012) was used to measure intergroup anxiety. A researcher-designed measure of media exposure and the Bias Toward Immigrants Measure (Beyer & Matthes, 2015) were used to measure media influence as a proximal moderating factor. Correlational analyses indicated a significant relationship between attitudes towards Mexican immigrants and endorsed levels of intergroup anxiety (r = -.21 at p <.01). Regression analyses found no evidence of a significant difference among the dimensions of perceived threat, however, the data supported media influence and personal connection as significant predictors of the outcome variables. The current study suggests that negative attitudes towards ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Greenland Florida State University: DigiNole Commons Greenland Matthes ENVELOPE(-65.833,-65.833,-67.500,-67.500)
institution Open Polar
collection Florida State University: DigiNole Commons
op_collection_id ftfloridasu
language English
topic Counseling psychology
Educational psychology
Multimedia systems
spellingShingle Counseling psychology
Educational psychology
Multimedia systems
The Integration of Perceived Threat, Media Influence, and Intergroup Anxiety: An Investigation into Stigma Surrounding the Mexican Immigration Debate among U.S. Native-Born College Students
topic_facet Counseling psychology
Educational psychology
Multimedia systems
description A growing body of research has investigated the stigma surrounding immigration, the impact it has on individual and group level attitudes, interactions, and well-being, as well the role of individual factors and media influences. The current study aimed to build on this research by exploring the impact of perceived threat on U.S. native-born college students’ endorsed levels of intergroup anxiety and attitudes towards Mexican immigrants specifically. Additionally, the potential moderating roles of media influence, educational level, and personal connection were explored. The design of this study was informed by a combined theoretical framework of Intergroup Threat Theory’s (ITT; Stephan & Stephan, 2000) three dimensions of perceived threat- economic, symbolic, and physical- and cultivation theory (Morgan, Shananhan, & Signorielli, 2009). Consistent with past research, this study focused on the experiences of native-born U.S. college students (n = 393) who were of voting age (18+). The participants were presented with vignettes to prime one of the perceived threat dimensions or the control no threat condition. A modified version of the Attitude Towards Immigrants Scale (ATI; Bae, 2016) was used to measure attitudes towards Mexican immigrants, while the Self Other Intergroup Anxiety Scale (SOIAS; Greenland, Xenias, & Maio, 2012) was used to measure intergroup anxiety. A researcher-designed measure of media exposure and the Bias Toward Immigrants Measure (Beyer & Matthes, 2015) were used to measure media influence as a proximal moderating factor. Correlational analyses indicated a significant relationship between attitudes towards Mexican immigrants and endorsed levels of intergroup anxiety (r = -.21 at p <.01). Regression analyses found no evidence of a significant difference among the dimensions of perceived threat, however, the data supported media influence and personal connection as significant predictors of the outcome variables. The current study suggests that negative attitudes towards ...
author2 Martinez, Jadelyn Kuuipo (author)
Dong, Shengli (professor directing dissertation)
Tillman, Kathryn H. (university representative)
Osborn, Debra S., 1968- (committee member)
Becker, Martin Swanbrow (committee member)
Florida State University (degree granting institution)
College of Education (degree granting college)
Department of Educational Psychology and Learning Systems (degree granting department)
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
title The Integration of Perceived Threat, Media Influence, and Intergroup Anxiety: An Investigation into Stigma Surrounding the Mexican Immigration Debate among U.S. Native-Born College Students
title_short The Integration of Perceived Threat, Media Influence, and Intergroup Anxiety: An Investigation into Stigma Surrounding the Mexican Immigration Debate among U.S. Native-Born College Students
title_full The Integration of Perceived Threat, Media Influence, and Intergroup Anxiety: An Investigation into Stigma Surrounding the Mexican Immigration Debate among U.S. Native-Born College Students
title_fullStr The Integration of Perceived Threat, Media Influence, and Intergroup Anxiety: An Investigation into Stigma Surrounding the Mexican Immigration Debate among U.S. Native-Born College Students
title_full_unstemmed The Integration of Perceived Threat, Media Influence, and Intergroup Anxiety: An Investigation into Stigma Surrounding the Mexican Immigration Debate among U.S. Native-Born College Students
title_sort integration of perceived threat, media influence, and intergroup anxiety: an investigation into stigma surrounding the mexican immigration debate among u.s. native-born college students
publisher Florida State University
publishDate 2020
url https://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A777037/datastream/TN/view/Integration%20of%20Perceived%20Threat,%20Media%20Influence,%20and%20Intergroup%20Anxiety.jpg
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