Christensen P Niels, Rothgerber Hank, Wood Wendy, Matz David C
San Diego State University, USA.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2004 Oct;30(10):1295-309. doi: 10.1177/0146167204264480.
Two studies demonstrated that greater identification with a group was associated with more positive emotions for members who conformed with versus violated the group's norms. These effects were found with injunctive norms, which specify what members should do or what they ideally would do, but emerged less consistently with descriptive norms, which specify what members typically do. Descriptive norms affected emotional responses when they acquired identity-relevance by differentiating an important ingroup from a rival outgroup. For these descriptive norms, much like injunctive norms, greater identification yielded more positive emotions following conformity than violation. The authors suggest that positive emotions and self-evaluations underlie conformity with the norms of self-defining groups.
两项研究表明,对于那些遵守或违反群体规范的成员来说,与群体的认同感越强,所产生的积极情绪就越多。这些效应在指令性规范(规定成员应该做什么或理想情况下会做什么)中得到了体现,但在描述性规范(规定成员通常做什么)中出现的一致性较低。当描述性规范通过区分重要的内群体和敌对的外群体而获得身份相关性时,它会影响情绪反应。对于这些描述性规范,与指令性规范非常相似,认同感越强,遵守规范后产生的积极情绪就比违反规范后更多。作者认为,积极情绪和自我评估是遵守自我定义群体规范的基础。