“…For example, research from this perspective has shown that (a) identity is fluid and context-dependent (e.g., Onorato & Turner, 2002); (b) social forces (e.g., comparative contexts, intergroup relations) shape how individuals understand the defining features of groups (e.g., Haslam, Turner, Oakes, McGarty, & Hayes, 1992), including those to which they belong (e.g., Simon, 1992), and this has consequences for how they understand their self and act on that basis (e.g., Rabinovich, Morton, Postmes, & Verplanken, 2012), and; (c) people's evaluations of, and emotional reactions to, other people, information, ideas, and events varies as a function of how these things reflect and contribute to their own salient sense of identity (e.g., Dumont, Yzerbyt, Wigboldus, & Gordijn, 2003;Häusser, Kattenstroth, van Dick, & Mojzisch, 2012;Haslam, Jetten, O'Brien, & Jacobs, 2004;Mackie, Worth, & Asuncion, 1990;Morton, Haslam, Postmes, & Ryan, 2006;Schmitt, Silvia, & Branscombe, 2000).…”