Roberta Rosa Valtorta

Postdoctoral Researcher


Curriculum vitae



Department of Psychology

University of Milano-Bicocca



Agency attribution and biological dehumanization: Preliminary evidence


Journal article


Roberta Rosa Valtorta, Cristina Baldissarri, Nicola Palena, Chiara Volpato
Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, vol. 35, 2025, pp. e70146


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APA   Click to copy
Valtorta, R. R., Baldissarri, C., Palena, N., & Volpato, C. (2025). Agency attribution and biological dehumanization: Preliminary evidence. Journal of Community &Amp; Applied Social Psychology, 35, e70146. https://doi.org/10.1002/casp.70146


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Valtorta, Roberta Rosa, Cristina Baldissarri, Nicola Palena, and Chiara Volpato. “Agency Attribution and Biological Dehumanization: Preliminary Evidence.” Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology 35 (2025): e70146.


MLA   Click to copy
Valtorta, Roberta Rosa, et al. “Agency Attribution and Biological Dehumanization: Preliminary Evidence.” Journal of Community &Amp; Applied Social Psychology, vol. 35, 2025, p. e70146, doi:10.1002/casp.70146.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{roberta2025a,
  title = {Agency attribution and biological dehumanization: Preliminary evidence},
  year = {2025},
  journal = {Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology},
  pages = {e70146},
  volume = {35},
  doi = {10.1002/casp.70146},
  author = {Valtorta, Roberta Rosa and Baldissarri, Cristina and Palena, Nicola and Volpato, Chiara}
}

Abstract

Dehumanization is the perception of someone less than human. Several studies have used innovative approaches to investigate the subtle ways in which humanity can be denied. While most of these models clearly distinguish humans from animals and robots, none adequately capture the huge range of dehumanization that exists in metaphorical thought, such as disease-related metaphors (i.e., biologization). Building on existing theoretical frameworks concerning dehumanization, we developed a set of items (i.e., the Tripartite Agency Attribution Scale) measuring the capacity to experience emotions (affective mental states), produce effective actions (behavioral potential), and think rationally (cognitive abilities), and demonstrated the relevance of this approach to assess biological dehumanization. Study 1 (N = 512) and Study 2 (N = 237) consistently showed that viruses (vs. animals vs. humans) are perceived as possessing behavioral potential but lacking affective mental states and higher-order cognitions. Accordingly, Study 3 (N = 250) showed that biologized (vs. animalized vs. mechanized vs. non-dehumanized) social groups in Italian society are perceived as primarily possessing behavioral potential with limited affective and cognitive abilities. Our research provides empirical evidence of a new, subtle way to investigate one of the most understudied forms of dehumanization, while also expanding the literature on this process.


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