Cheung-Blunden Violet, Blunden Bill
Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA.
Aggress Behav. 2008 Mar-Apr;34(2):175-89. doi: 10.1002/ab.20234.
This study uses appraisal theory, functionalist approach to emotions, and recent theory on group emotions as a basic framework to model the genesis of supporting military action. During the year after the events of 9/11, 588 college students participated in a series of four studies that assessed religious affiliation, appraisal antecedents, anger response to viewing photographs of the 9/11 attack, and support for military action. Structural equation modeling demonstrated that the relation between support for the war and attitudes toward terrorism and relevance could be explained adequately by a model in which anger mediated the effects of attitudes and relevance on support. Attitudes toward terrorism were further identified as mediators that could explain the group effect by Christians. The result was not only generalizable across the conflict in Afghanistan and Iraq, but also in terms of how consent for war manifests itself--outright calls for bloodshed versus more subtle, politically loaded, posturing (e.g. entreaties to "support our troops").
本研究采用评价理论、情绪功能主义方法以及近期的群体情绪理论作为基本框架,来构建支持军事行动起源的模型。在9·11事件后的一年里,588名大学生参与了一系列四项研究,这些研究评估了宗教归属、评价前因、观看9·11袭击照片后的愤怒反应以及对军事行动的支持。结构方程模型表明,对战争的支持与对恐怖主义的态度及相关性之间的关系,可以通过一个愤怒介导态度和相关性对支持的影响的模型得到充分解释。对恐怖主义的态度进一步被确定为可以解释基督徒群体效应的中介变量。这一结果不仅适用于阿富汗和伊拉克冲突,也适用于战争同意如何表现出来的情况——直接呼吁流血冲突与更微妙的、带有政治意味的姿态(例如恳求“支持我们的军队”)。