Sechrist Gretchen B, Swim Janet K, Stangor Charles
Department of Psychology, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Buffalo, NY 14260, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2004 Jul;87(1):111-22. doi: 10.1037/0022-3514.87.1.111.
Two experiments examined how the goals of self-presentation and maintenance of control over one's outcomes influence women's tendencies to make or to avoid making attributions to discrimination. Demonstrating the importance of self-presentational goals, Experiment 1 showed that targets of discrimination were just as likely as similar others to make attributions to discrimination under private reporting conditions, but they were significantly less likely to do so under public reporting conditions. This experiment also provided initial evidence that need for personal control increases discrimination attributions. Experiment 2 demonstrated that targets' minimization of discrimination, observed in public reporting conditions, was eliminated when the need to reassert personal control was induced. Both experiments also demonstrated that failing to view events as discrimination has negative psychological costs.
两项实验探究了自我展示的目标以及对自身结果保持控制的目标如何影响女性做出或避免做出歧视归因的倾向。实验1表明了自我展示目标的重要性,该实验发现,在私下报告的情况下,遭受歧视的对象与其他类似对象做出歧视归因的可能性相同,但在公开报告的情况下,他们做出歧视归因的可能性显著降低。该实验还提供了初步证据,表明个人控制需求会增加歧视归因。实验2表明,当引发了重申个人控制的需求时,在公开报告情况下观察到的对象对歧视的淡化就会消除。两项实验还都表明,不将事件视为歧视会带来负面心理代价。