“…Consequently, such malleability of social perceptions can result in different forms ranging from no (perceived) to exaggerated intergroup differences. So far, literature has consistently demonstrated that harsh intergroup differentiation (ingroup vs. outgroup) produce a range of biased intergroup responses: ingroup favoritism (Tajfel, Billig, Bundy, & Flament, 1971;Otten & Moskowitz, 2000); memory biases (Park & Rothbart, 1982); fundamental attribution error (Pettigrew, 1979); linguistic biases (Maass, Salvi, Arcuri, & Preprint: THE PROCESS OF BECOMING "WE" Semin, 1989), dehumanization (Demoulin, et al, 2009;Simon & Gutsell, 2021) and ultimately less prosocial intergroup behavior (Voci, 2006).…”