“…Studies also revealed that participants rated the deviant ingroup members more negatively compared with their outgroup counterparts (i.e., the black sheep effect; see Marques et al, 1988; Reese et al, 2013; Kunstman et al, 2016; Bettache et al, 2019). In addition, studies also showed that, in East Asian cultures, even though the participants were not minorities or deviants, they still seemed to possess a general, status irrelevant, and pervasive negative posture toward ingroup members (Jahoda et al, 1972; Hewstone and Ward, 1985; Lee and Ottati, 1993, 1995; Diener et al, 1995; Heine and Lehman, 1997; Endo et al, 2000; Snibbe et al, 2003; Cuddy et al, 2009; Ma-Kellams et al, 2011; Zhao et al, 2012; Liu et al, 2015; Wu et al, 2015, 2016; Zuo et al, 2018; Xie et al, 2019). For example, researchers found that the Chinese implicitly associated Westerners with more positive traits and more civilized behaviors than their own ethnic group members (Ma-Kellams et al, 2011; Liu et al, 2015), and they were more prone to make outgroup-favoring and ingroup-disfavoring attributions (Hewstone and Ward, 1985).…”