Magee Joe C, Tiedens Larissa Z
New York University, USA.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2006 Dec;32(12):1703-15. doi: 10.1177/0146167206292094.
In three studies, observers based inferences about the cohesiveness and common fate of groups on the emotions expressed by group members. The valence of expressions affected cohesiveness inferences, whereas the consistency of expressions affected inferences of whether members have common fate. These emotion composition effects were stronger than those due to the race or sex composition of the group. Furthermore, the authors show that emotion valence and consistency are differentially involved in judgments about the degree to which the group as a whole was responsible for group performance. Finally, it is demonstrated that valence-cohesiveness effects are mediated by inferences of interpersonal liking and that consistency-common fate effects are mediated by inferences of psychological similarity. These findings have implications for the literature on entitativity and regarding the function of emotions in social contexts.
在三项研究中,观察者根据群体成员表达的情绪对群体的凝聚力和共同命运进行推断。表情的效价影响凝聚力推断,而表情的一致性影响对成员是否有共同命运的推断。这些情绪构成效应比因群体的种族或性别构成产生的效应更强。此外,作者表明情绪效价和一致性在判断整个群体对群体表现的负责程度时所起的作用不同。最后,研究表明效价 - 凝聚力效应是通过人际喜欢的推断来介导的,而一致性 - 共同命运效应是通过心理相似性的推断来介导的。这些发现对关于实体性的文献以及情绪在社会背景中的作用具有启示意义。