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Article
Foul Ball: Audience-Held Stereotypes of Baseball Players
Howard Journal of Communications
  • Patrick Ferrucci, University of Colorado
  • Edson C. Tandoc, Jr., Nanyang Technological University
  • Chad Painter, University of Dayton
  • J. David Wolfgang, University of Missouri
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2016
Abstract

This study experimentally tested whether participants held and/or applied stereotypes of baseball players. Participants were asked to rate white, black, and Latino baseball players based on stereotypes consistently identified in previous literature.

Participants saw a photo of a player and an anonymous paragraph from a newspaper that highlighted a particular stereotype. They were then asked to rate the author's credibility. Black players were rated as higher in physical strength and natural ability, consistent with previous literature concerning how athletes were described. However, white and Latin players were not stereotyped. But participants rated white-consistent descriptions as credible and Latin-consistent descriptions as less credible. These results are interpreted through the prism of social identity theory.

Inclusive pages
68-84
ISBN/ISSN
1064-6175
Document Version
Postprint
Comments

The document available for download is the authors' accepted manuscript, provided in compliance with the publisher's policy on self-archiving. Differences may exist between this document and the published version, which is available using the DOI provided. Permission documentation is on file.

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Citation Information
Patrick Ferrucci, Edson C. Tandoc, Chad Painter and J. David Wolfgang. "Foul Ball: Audience-Held Stereotypes of Baseball Players" Howard Journal of Communications Vol. 27 Iss. 1 (2016)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/chad-painter/12/