The University of Vermont, Department of Psychology, John Dewey Hall, 2 Colchester Ave., Burlington, VT 05405-0134, USA.
J Soc Psychol. 2012 Mar-Apr;152(2):131-5. doi: 10.1080/00224545.2011.593589.
The present study examined whether expressed acceptance of a person with AIDS reflects genuine acceptance or a desire to appear to be accepting. Theory and research on the effects of mortality salience on acceptance of stigmatized people provided the framework for investigating this question. After writing about death or another aversive topic, participants indicated their acceptance of a target with AIDS while connected to physiological equipment that they believed could detect lies (bogus pipeline) or was simply measuring physiological responses to participation in the study. As predicted, participants in the mortality salience/bogus pipeline condition indicated significantly less acceptance of the target with AIDS than participants in the other three conditions, suggesting that acceptance of a person with AIDS is at least partially a result of wanting to appear to be accepting, without necessarily genuinely accepting someone with AIDS.
本研究考察了对艾滋病患者的表达接受是否反映了真正的接受,还是仅仅是为了表现出接受的意愿。关于死亡凸显效应对被污名化的人接受程度的影响的理论和研究为研究这个问题提供了框架。在写了关于死亡或其他令人不快的话题后,参与者在与生理设备相连的情况下表示对艾滋病患者的接受程度,他们认为该设备可以检测谎言(虚假管道)或只是测量参与研究的生理反应。正如预测的那样,在死亡凸显/虚假管道条件下的参与者对艾滋病患者的接受程度明显低于其他三个条件下的参与者,这表明对艾滋病患者的接受程度至少部分是出于想要表现出接受的意愿,而不一定是真正接受艾滋病患者。