1 Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
2 City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, CA, USA.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2019 May;45(5):700-714. doi: 10.1177/0146167218795157. Epub 2018 Sep 18.
This work examined the effects of socioeconomic status (SES)-based social identity threat on cardiovascular indexes of challenge and threat and self-regulatory strength. Participants ( N = 104) took an exam described as either diagnostic of intellectual ability (identity threat) or framed as a problem-solving task (control) while we recorded cardiovascular reactivity and assessed participants' physical self-control. Under identity threat, lower SES students exhibited impaired performance, reduced self-control, and cardiovascular threat reactivity. In contrast, higher SES students under threat exhibited the reverse pattern-a boost in performance, no change in self-regulation, and cardiovascular challenge reactivity. Furthermore, while measures of general arousal (heart rate and pre-ejection period) were unrelated to performance, cardiovascular patterns of challenge and threat were significantly associated with performance under identity threat. Results provide evidence that SES-based stigma influences physiological and self-regulatory processes.
这项工作考察了基于社会经济地位(SES)的社会身份威胁对挑战和威胁的心血管指标以及自我调节强度的影响。参与者(N=104)参加了一项被描述为智力能力诊断(身份威胁)或解决问题任务(对照)的考试,同时我们记录了心血管反应,并评估了参与者的身体自我控制。在身份威胁下,社会经济地位较低的学生表现出表现不佳、自我控制能力下降和心血管威胁反应。相比之下,在受到威胁时,社会经济地位较高的学生表现出相反的模式——表现提高,自我调节不变,心血管挑战反应增强。此外,虽然一般唤醒(心率和射前期)的测量与表现无关,但在身份威胁下,挑战和威胁的心血管模式与表现显著相关。结果表明,基于 SES 的污名会影响生理和自我调节过程。