Does Digital Intergroup Contact Reduce Prejudice? A Meta-Analysis.
Leonor Pereira da CostaKinga BierwiaczonekMauro BianchiPublished in: Cyberpsychology, behavior and social networking (2024)
With the ubiquity of technology in the modern life, contact between different social groups via different digital means is an everyday reality. Can such a digital intergroup contact reduce prejudice, or does it exacerbate it? In this study, we summarize the present evidence on the links between intergroup digital contact and prejudice in a variety of intergroup contexts. We meta-analyzed experimental and correlational evidence from 88 independent samples ( n = 9,385). Digital intergroup contact showed a small but significant effect consistent with prejudice reduction ( g = 0.25). Direct digital contact showed larger effect than indirect forms of contact, and contact via computer-mediated communication showed larger effects than contact achieved via other activities such as interacting with nonplayable characters or embodiment. The effects were similar regardless of the type of out-group targeted by prejudice. Overall, meta-analytical results suggest that digital intergroup contact may reduce prejudice.