Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208, USA.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2013 Jan;39(1):115-27. doi: 10.1177/0146167212466114. Epub 2012 Nov 6.
Four studies investigate how perceptions that one's social group has been victimized in society-that is, perceived group victimhood (PGV)-influence intergroup trust. Jewish and politically conservative participants played an economic trust game ostensibly with "partners" from their ingroup and/or a salient outgroup. Across studies, participants dispositionally or primed to be high in PGV revealed greater trust behavior with ingroup than outgroup partners. Control participants and those dispositionally low in PGV did not display such bias. Study 3 revealed, moreover, that high PGV enhanced ingroup trust even after an overt betrayal by an ingroup partner. Results were not explained by fluctuations in group identification, highlighting the novel, independent role of PGV in shaping an important aspect of intergroup relations-that is, trust. Implications of PGV for intergroup relations are discussed.
四项研究调查了人们对自己的社会群体在社会中受到伤害的看法——即感知到的群体受害(PGV)——如何影响群体间信任。犹太人和政治保守派参与者参与了一项经济信任游戏,表面上是与来自他们的内群体和/或一个突出的外群体的“伙伴”进行游戏。在所有研究中,表现出高 PGV 的参与者在与内群体伙伴相比时表现出更大的信任行为,而外群体伙伴则没有表现出这种偏见。此外,研究 3 表明,即使内群体伙伴明显背叛,高 PGV 也会增强对内群体的信任。结果不能用群体认同的波动来解释,这突显了 PGV 在塑造群体关系的一个重要方面——即信任方面的新颖的、独立的作用。还讨论了 PGV 对群体关系的影响。