Möller-Leimkühler A M
Psychiatrische Klinik der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich.
Fortschr Neurol Psychiatr. 2004 Jan;72(1):36-44. doi: 10.1055/s-2003-812456.
Prejudices and social stigma in mental illness have a long tradition and have hardly been modified by educational programmes on the long term. The question, why these negative social attitudes appear to be considerably resistant to change is analysed with reference to social psychological research on stereotypes. First, a short review of studies on public attitudes towards the mentally ill and media analyses will give evidence to the widespread stereotypical misconceptions and their reproduction by selected media information. Then the dynamics of social stereotyping will be explained in relation to cultural, cognitive and emotional factors focussing on the development and activation of stereotypes within the paradigm of information processing. It is supposed that stereotype activation facilitates the processing of consistent information as well as it inhibits the processing of inconsistent information. Implications for changing negative attitudes about the mentally ill are discussed.
精神疾病方面的偏见和社会污名由来已久,长期以来几乎没有因教育项目而得到改变。关于为何这些负面社会态度似乎极难改变这一问题,将参照社会心理学对刻板印象的研究进行分析。首先,对公众对精神疾病患者态度的研究以及媒体分析进行简要回顾,将证明普遍存在的刻板误解以及特定媒体信息对它们的再现。然后将结合文化、认知和情感因素来解释社会刻板印象的动态变化,重点关注信息处理范式内刻板印象的形成和激活。据推测,刻板印象的激活既有助于处理一致信息,也会抑制不一致信息的处理。文中还讨论了改变对精神疾病患者负面态度的意义。