See Ya Hui Michelle, Petty Richard E
Department of Psychology, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210-1222, USA.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2006 Mar;32(3):405-16. doi: 10.1177/0146167205282737.
Past Terror Management Theory (TMT) research has demonstrated that mortality salience leads to favoritism toward ingroup members and derogation of outgroup members and to polarized attitudes toward the source of pro and counterattitudinal statements. In such research, the individual's group membership and the individual's worldview position were examined separately. Thus, when the individual's group membership was manipulated, one could normally assume that an outgroup member is counterattitudinal and an ingroup member is proattitudinal. It is unclear, therefore, whether ingroup members elicited favoritism from mortality salient participants because of their group membership or because of their presumably proattitudinal position, or both. The authors present two studies in which the individual's group membership and attitudinal position are jointly manipulated. Results showed that among mortality salient participants, the outgroup member received favorable or unfavorable evaluations depending on his position, whereas the ingroup member received moderately positive evaluations regardless of the position taken.
以往的恐怖管理理论(TMT)研究表明,死亡凸显会导致对内群体成员的偏袒和对外群体成员的诋毁,以及对支持和反对态度陈述来源的两极化态度。在这类研究中,个体的群体成员身份和个体的世界观立场是分别进行考察的。因此,当操纵个体的群体成员身份时,通常可以假定外群体成员持反对态度,内群体成员持支持态度。所以,尚不清楚内群体成员从死亡凸显的参与者那里获得偏袒是因为他们的群体成员身份,还是因为他们可能持有的支持态度,或者两者皆有。作者呈现了两项研究,其中个体的群体成员身份和态度立场是共同被操纵的。结果显示,在死亡凸显的参与者中,外群体成员根据其立场获得了有利或不利的评价,而内群体成员无论持何种立场都获得了适度积极的评价。