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- Planned Parenthood - What are gender roles and stereotypes?
- Simply Psychology - Stereotype
- Frontiers - Addressing Stereotype Threat is Critical to Diversity and Inclusion in Organizational Psychology
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - Editorial: The psychological process of stereotyping: Content, forming, internalizing, mechanisms, effects, and interventions
- Gouvernement du Québec - Family and support for individuals - Effects of Stereotypes on Personal Development
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stereotype, in psychology, a fixed, oversimplified, and often biased belief about a group of people. Stereotypes are typically rationally unsupported generalizations, and, once a person becomes accustomed to stereotypical thinking, he or she may not be able to see individuals for who they are. Stereotypes can legitimize hostility against a whole social group. In addition, because stereotypes are ingrained in the culture—people begin learning stereotypes during childhood—they tend to signal which social groups are presumably appropriate targets for relieving individual frustration.