Pinter Brad, Insko Chester A, Wildschut Tim, Kirchner Jeffrey L, Montoya R Matthew, Wolf Scott T
Department of Psychology, The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona, PA 16601, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2007 Aug;93(2):250-65. doi: 10.1037/0022-3514.93.2.250.
Two experiments contrasted interactions between group leaders with interactions between individuals in a mixed-motive setting. Consistent with the idea that being accountable to the in-group implies normative pressure to benefit the in-group, Experiment 1 found that accountable leaders were more competitive than individuals. Consistent with the idea that being unaccountable to the in-group implies normative pressure to be cooperative and that high guilt proneness provides motivation to be moral, Experiment 2 found that when guilt proneness was high, unaccountable leaders were less competitive than accountable leaders and did not differ significantly from individuals. In other words, the robust interindividual-intergroup discontinuity effect was eliminated when groups had unaccountable leaders who were high in guilt proneness.
两项实验对比了在混合动机情境下团队领导者之间的互动与个体之间的互动。与对群体负责意味着有使群体受益的规范压力这一观点一致,实验1发现,负有责任的领导者比个体更具竞争性。与对群体不负责意味着有合作的规范压力且高内疚倾向提供了道德行为动机这一观点一致,实验2发现,当内疚倾向较高时,不负责任的领导者比负责任的领导者竞争性更弱,且与个体没有显著差异。换句话说,当群体拥有内疚倾向较高的不负责任的领导者时,强大的个体-群体间断效应就会消除。