Poteat V Paul, Espelage Dorothy L, Green Harold D
Department of Educational Psychology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL 61820, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2007 Jun;92(6):1040-50. doi: 10.1037/0022-3514.92.6.1040.
Using the framework of social dominance theory, the current investigation tested for the contextual effects of adolescent peer groups on individuals' homophobic and social dominance attitudes. Results from multilevel models indicated that significant differences existed across peer groups on homophobic attitudes. In addition, these differences were accounted for on the basis of the hierarchy-enhancing or -attenuating climate of the group. A group socialization effect on individuals' social dominance attitudes over time was also observed. Furthermore, the social climate of the peer group moderated the stability of individuals' social dominance attitudes. Findings support the need to examine more proximal and informal group affiliations and earlier developmental periods in efforts to build more comprehensive theoretical models explaining when and how prejudiced and dominance attitudes are formed and the way in which they are perpetuated.
本研究运用社会支配理论框架,检验了青少年同龄群体对个体恐同态度和社会支配态度的情境效应。多层次模型的结果表明,不同同龄群体在恐同态度上存在显著差异。此外,这些差异是基于群体增强或减弱等级制度的氛围来解释的。研究还观察到群体社会化对个体社会支配态度随时间的影响。此外,同龄群体的社会氛围调节了个体社会支配态度的稳定性。研究结果支持这样一种观点,即需要考察更直接和非正式的群体归属以及更早的发展阶段,以便构建更全面的理论模型,解释偏见和支配态度何时以及如何形成,以及它们持续存在的方式。