Derks Belle, van Laar Colette, Ellemers Naomi
Institute for Psychological Research, Social and Organizational Psychology Unit, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2009 Jan;96(1):183-202. doi: 10.1037/a0013068.
Experiencing social identity threat can lead members of stigmatized groups to protect their self-regard by withdrawing from domains that are associated with higher status groups. Four experiments examined how providing identity affirmation in alternative domains affects performance motivation in status-defining domains among stigmatized group members. Two forms of identity affirmation were distinguished: self-affirmation, which enhances personal identity, and group affirmation, which enhances social identity. The results showed that although self- and group affirmation both induce high performance motivation, they do so in different ways. Whereas self-affirmation induces a focus on the personal self, group affirmation induces a focus on the social self (Study 1). Accordingly, group affirmation elicited high performance motivation among highly identified group members (Studies 1 and 2) by inducing challenge (Study 2) and protected interest in group-serving behaviors that improve collective status (Studies 3 and 4). By contrast, low identifiers were challenged and motivated to perform well only after self-affirmation (Studies 1 and 2) and reported an even stronger inclination to work for themselves at the expense of the group when offered group affirmation (Studies 3 and 4).
经历社会身份威胁会导致受污名化群体的成员通过退出与较高地位群体相关的领域来保护自己的自尊。四项实验研究了在其他领域提供身份肯定如何影响受污名化群体成员在地位定义领域的表现动机。区分了两种形式的身份肯定:自我肯定,它增强个人身份;群体肯定,它增强社会身份。结果表明,虽然自我肯定和群体肯定都能引发高表现动机,但方式不同。自我肯定引发对个人自我的关注,而群体肯定引发对社会自我的关注(研究1)。因此,群体肯定通过引发挑战(研究2)在高度认同群体的成员中引发了高表现动机(研究1和2),并保护了对改善集体地位的群体服务行为的兴趣(研究3和4)。相比之下,低认同者只有在自我肯定后才会受到挑战并被激励去表现出色(研究1和2),并且当得到群体肯定时,他们表现出更强的为自己工作而牺牲群体利益的倾向(研究3和4)。