Hunter J A
Psychology Department, University of Otago, New Zealand.
J Soc Psychol. 2001 Jun;141(3):401-11. doi: 10.1080/00224540109600561.
In a sample of New Zealand university students, the author extended earlier research into the relationship between self-esteem and intergroup discrimination. He found no support for the hypothesis that social-category members (i.e., Christians) experience an elevation in the domain of self-esteem (i.e., religious self-esteem) judged as more relevant to the in-group after evaluations favoring the in-group. Regardless of whether the evaluation targets behaved positively or negatively, the respondents in the experimental condition evaluated in-group (Christian) targets more highly than out-group (Atheist) targets. After evaluations favoring the in-group, the respondents did not experience an elevation of religious self-esteem, global self-esteem, or mathematical self-esteem (judged as less relevant to the in-group).
在一组新西兰大学生样本中,作者拓展了早期关于自尊与群体间歧视关系的研究。他没有找到证据支持这样的假设:即社会类别成员(即基督徒)在经历有利于内群体的评价后,在被认为与内群体更相关的自尊领域(即宗教自尊)会有所提升。无论评价对象的行为是积极还是消极,处于实验条件下的受访者对群体内(基督徒)对象的评价都高于群体外(无神论者)对象。在经历有利于内群体的评价后,受访者在宗教自尊、整体自尊或数学自尊(被认为与内群体相关性较低)方面并没有出现提升。