Vaes Jeroen, Paladino Maria Paola, Castelli Luigi, Leyens Jacques-Philippe, Giovanazzi Anna
Department of Developmental Psychology and Socialization, University of Padova, Padova, Italy.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2003 Dec;85(6):1016-34. doi: 10.1037/0022-3514.85.6.1016.
Four experiments confirmed the hypothesis that people discriminate the out-group on the basis of the expression of uniquely human emotions. In Study 1, using a lost e-mail paradigm, the expression of a uniquely human emotion resulted in "nicer" replies when the sender was an in-group compared with an out-group member. The same pattern of results was obtained in Studies 2 and 3 using a conformity paradigm. In addition, perceived similarity was measured and proposed as a potential underlying mechanism (Study 3). Finally, using an approach-avoidance procedure, Study 4 showed that people not only deprive the out-group of positive consequences as in the former studies but that people also act against the out-group. The role of infrahumanization underlying prejudice and discrimination is discussed.
四项实验证实了这一假设,即人们根据独特的人类情感表达来区分外群体。在研究1中,采用丢失电子邮件范式,当发件人为内群体成员而非外群体成员时,独特的人类情感表达会带来“更友好”的回复。在研究2和3中,采用从众范式也得到了相同的结果模式。此外,还测量了感知到的相似性,并将其作为一种潜在的潜在机制提出(研究3)。最后,研究4采用趋近-回避程序表明,人们不仅像之前的研究那样剥夺外群体的积极结果,而且还会对外群体采取敌对行动。讨论了低于人类化在偏见和歧视中的作用。