Andersson Matthew A
Yale University, United States.
Soc Sci Res. 2015 Jul;52:317-29. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2015.02.009. Epub 2015 Mar 2.
Subjective social status (SSS), or one's perceived social standing, is linked robustly to mental and physical health and is thought to be determined in part by a cognitive average of one's past, present and expected socioeconomic status. However, this averaging principle awaits a formal test. Further, cultures differ with regard to how they perceive and discount time. In this study, I draw upon cross-sectional data from the United States and Japan (2005 MIDUS non-Hispanic whites and 2008 MIDJA), which measured subjective status in terms of one's perceived standing within a personally defined community. I compare equal and unequal cognitive averaging models for their goodness of fit relative to a traditional present-based model. Socioeconomic status is assessed broadly, in terms of past, present and expected overall work and financial situations. In the United States, averaging models do not fit the data consistently better than a present-based model of SSS. However, in Japan, averaging models do fit SSS consistently better. These fit conclusions are robust to controlling for negative affect.
主观社会地位(SSS),即个人对自己社会地位的认知,与身心健康密切相关,并且被认为部分取决于对个人过去、现在和预期社会经济地位的认知平均值。然而,这一平均原则尚待正式检验。此外,不同文化在对时间的认知和折扣方式上存在差异。在本研究中,我利用了来自美国和日本的横断面数据(2005年美国中年发展研究中的非西班牙裔白人以及2008年日本中年发展研究),这些数据根据个人在自己定义的社区中的认知地位来衡量主观地位。我比较了平等和不平等认知平均模型与传统的基于当下的模型相比的拟合优度。社会经济地位从过去、现在和预期的总体工作及财务状况方面进行广泛评估。在美国,平均模型并不总是比基于当下的主观社会地位模型更能拟合数据。然而,在日本,平均模型确实始终能更好地拟合主观社会地位。这些拟合结论在控制负面影响方面是稳健的。