Department of Psychology, Department of Psychology, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63130, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2010 Jun;98(6):886-903. doi: 10.1037/a0019086.
Rally 'round the flag effects (J. E. Mueller, 1970) represent sudden and dramatically powerful situation-specific shifts in attitudes toward the American president. However, the extant literature has yet to fully clarify the nature of the psychological dynamics associated with this effect. These ambiguities reflect fundamental differences of opinion among scholars on some very basic questions such as whether overtly experienced emotion should mediate these attitudinal shifts or whether these changes reflect more general shifts in conservative ideology. Across 4 experiments, the authors sought to gain greater clarity on these and other important matters using a multimethod approach in which the authors varied whether participants viewed documentary footage of the 9/11 attacks (Experiments 1-2), generated autobiographical memories of that event (Experiment 3), or retrieved nonpolitical memories from their past (Experiment 4). The authors discuss the relevance of the present findings for theory and research across a variety of different theoretical and methodological paradigms, including social psychological models of threat, emotional appraisal models, and the political science literature.
拉利' 轮' 国旗效应 (J. E. 穆勒,1970) 代表对美国总统的态度突然而戏剧性的具体情况变化。然而,现有文献尚未完全阐明与该效应相关的心理动态的性质。这些模棱两可反映了学者们在一些非常基本的问题上存在根本分歧,例如,是否应该通过明显经历的情绪来调节这些态度转变,或者这些变化是否反映了保守意识形态的更普遍转变。在 4 项实验中,作者试图通过使用多方法方法来获得这些和其他重要问题的更大清晰度,其中作者改变了参与者观看 9/11 袭击纪录片片段的方式 (实验 1-2),生成了该事件的自传体记忆 (实验 3),或从过去检索非政治记忆 (实验 4)。作者讨论了目前的发现对于包括威胁的社会心理学模型、情绪评估模型和政治学文献在内的各种不同理论和方法范式的理论和研究的相关性。