School of Psychology, Cardiff University, UK.
Br J Soc Psychol. 2015 Sep;54(3):483-99. doi: 10.1111/bjso.12100. Epub 2015 Jan 7.
In the present research, we examine the ways in which exposure to hostile sexism influences women's competitive collective action intentions. Prior to testing our main model, our first study experimentally induced high versus low levels of security-comfort with the aim of providing experimental evidence for the proposed causal link between these emotions and intentions to engage in social competition. Results showed that lower levels of security-comfort reduced women's readiness to compete socially with men. Experiment 2 investigated the effect of hostile sexism on women's emotional reactions and readiness to engage in social competition. Consistent with the proposed model, results showed that exposure to hostile beliefs about women (1) increased anger-frustration and (2) decreased security-comfort. More specifically, exposure to hostile sexism had a positive indirect effect on social competition intentions through anger-frustration, and a negative indirect effect through security-comfort.
在本研究中,我们考察了暴露于敌意性别歧视如何影响女性竞争集体行动的意愿。在检验我们的主要模型之前,我们的第一项研究通过实验诱发高和低的安全舒适度,旨在为这些情绪与参与社会竞争的意愿之间的因果关系提供实验证据。结果表明,较低的安全舒适度降低了女性与男性进行社会竞争的准备程度。实验 2 调查了敌意性别歧视对女性情绪反应和参与社会竞争的准备程度的影响。与提出的模型一致,结果表明,女性的敌意信念(1)增加了愤怒挫折感,(2)降低了安全舒适度。更具体地说,敌意性别歧视通过愤怒挫折感对社会竞争意愿产生了积极的间接影响,通过安全舒适度产生了消极的间接影响。