Skafte D
J Soc Psychol. 1989 Feb;129(1):93-9. doi: 10.1080/00224545.1989.9711703.
American adolescents between the ages of 11 and 16 were shown a photograph and a brief biographical sketch of a stranger in their own age group. The stranger was described as poor, wealthy, or neutral (no economic cues provided). Subjects were asked to rate the stranger on 20 characterological traits arranged in a semantic differential format. Strangers depicted as poor received significantly lower overall ratings than did neutral or wealthy strangers. Wealthy strangers were perceived to be more intelligent, to make better grades, to make friends more easily, and to embody other positive traits to a greater degree than neutral or poor strangers. Contrary to findings in other studies, however, poor individuals were not perceived to be lazy or to mishandle money. No interactions were found between affluence-based character judgments and the sex or age of subjects.
研究人员向11至16岁的美国青少年展示了一张同龄陌生人的照片以及一份简短的人物简介。这个陌生人被描述为贫穷、富有或中性(未提供经济线索)。研究对象被要求根据20个性格特征,以语义差异格式对这个陌生人进行评分。被描绘为贫穷的陌生人得到的总体评分显著低于中性或富有的陌生人。与中性或贫穷的陌生人相比,富有的陌生人被认为更聪明、成绩更好、更容易交到朋友,并且在更大程度上体现出其他积极的特质。然而,与其他研究的结果相反,贫穷的人并未被认为懒惰或理财不善。基于财富的性格判断与研究对象的性别或年龄之间未发现相互作用。