van Prooijen Jan-Willem, Karremans Johan C, van Beest Ilja
Department of Social Psychology, Free University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2006 Oct;91(4):686-97. doi: 10.1037/0022-3514.91.4.686.
The authors investigate the relation between the hedonic principle (people's motivations to approach pleasure and to avoid pain) and procedural justice. They explore whether approach or avoidance motivation increases the effect that people feel they were treated more fairly following procedures that do versus do not allow them an opportunity to voice their opinion. Experiments 1 and 2 reveal that these procedures influence procedural justice judgments more strongly when people conduct approach motor action (arm flexion) than when they conduct avoidance motor action (arm extension). Experiment 3 indicates that individual-difference measures of participants' approach motivations predicted procedural justice judgments following voice versus no-voice procedures. The authors conclude that people's motivational orientations stimulate their fairness-based reactions to voice procedures.
作者们研究了享乐主义原则(人们追求快乐和避免痛苦的动机)与程序正义之间的关系。他们探讨了追求或回避动机是否会增强人们的感受,即相比于不允许他们发表意见的程序,允许他们发表意见的程序会让他们觉得受到了更公平的对待。实验1和实验2表明,当人们进行追求性的肢体动作(手臂弯曲)时,这些程序对程序正义判断的影响要比他们进行回避性的肢体动作(手臂伸展)时更为强烈。实验3表明,参与者追求动机的个体差异测量指标能够预测在有发表意见程序和无发表意见程序下的程序正义判断。作者们得出结论,人们的动机取向激发了他们对发表意见程序基于公平的反应。