“…For example, people with ambivalent attitudes toward Blacks should be more willing to help a friendly Black person than an unfriendly Black person or should find the friendly Black more likeable than the unfriendly Black; these differences in responses should be weaker or absent for persons with nonambivalent attitudes toward Blacks. Support for the ambivalence amplification hypothesis has been obtained for several attitude objects (mostly, stigmatized groups such as Blacks, handicapped people, feminists, Native people) and across a wide range of response types (e.g., evaluative judgments concerning the attitude object; helping; intention to hire a member of a certain group in a fictitious job application scenario; administration of electric shocks; e.g., Bell & Esses, 1997, 2002Gibbons, Stephan, Stephenson, & Petty, 1980;Hass, Katz, Rizzo, Bailey, & Eisenstadt, 1991;Jonas, Diehl, & Broemer, 1997;MacDonald & Zanna, 1998;Maio, Bell, & Esses, 1996).…”