Callan Mitchell J, Kim Hyunji, Gheorghiu Ana I, Matthews William J
Department of Psychology, University of Essex, Colchester, United Kingdom.
Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Soc Psychol Personal Sci. 2017 Aug;8(6):660-669. doi: 10.1177/1948550616673877. Epub 2016 Nov 11.
We propose that personal relative deprivation (PRD)-the belief that one is worse off than similar others-plays a key role in the link between social class and prosociality. Across multiple samples and measures (total = 2,233), people higher in PRD were less inclined to help others. When considered in isolation, neither objective nor subjective socioeconomic status (SES) was meaningfully associated with prosociality. However, because people who believe themselves to be at the top of the socioeconomic hierarchy are typically low in PRD, these variables act as mutual suppressors-the predictive validity of both is enhanced when they are considered simultaneously, revealing that both higher subjective SES and higher PRD are associated with lower prosociality. These results cast new light on the complex connections between relative social status and people's willingness to act for the benefit of others.
我们认为,个人相对剥夺感(即认为自己比类似的其他人境遇更差的信念)在社会阶层与亲社会行为之间的联系中起着关键作用。在多个样本和测量指标(总计2233个)中,个人相对剥夺感较高的人帮助他人的意愿较低。单独来看,客观或主观社会经济地位(SES)与亲社会行为均无显著关联。然而,由于认为自己处于社会经济等级制度顶端的人通常个人相对剥夺感较低,这些变量起到了相互抑制的作用——当同时考虑这两个变量时,它们的预测效度都会提高,这表明较高的主观社会经济地位和较高的个人相对剥夺感都与较低的亲社会行为相关。这些结果为相对社会地位与人们为他人利益行事的意愿之间的复杂联系提供了新的视角。