Cook, Jonathan E.Arrow, HollyMalle, Bertram F.2015-12-032015-12-032011https://hdl.handle.net/1794/1945416 PagesAn experience sampling study examined the degree to which feeling stereotyped predicts feelings of low power and inhibition among stigmatized and nonstigmatized individuals. For 7 days, participants with a concealable (gay and lesbian), a visible (African American), or no identifiable stigma recorded feelings of being stereotyped, of powerlessness, and of inhibition immediately following social interactions. For members of all three groups, feeling stereotyped was associated with more inhibition, and this relation was partially mediated by feeling low in power. Although stigmatized participants reported feeling stereotyped more often than nonstigmatized participants, they reacted less strongly to the experience, consistent with the presence of buffering mechanisms developed by those living with stigma. African Americans appeared to buffer the impact of feeling stereotyped more effectively than gay and lesbian participants, an effect that was partly attributable to African Americans’ higher identity centrality.en-USCreative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-USStereotypesInhibitionPowerStigmaThe Effect of Feeling Stereotyped on Social Power and InhibitionArticle