Liu I-Ting Huai-Ching, Uchida Yukiko, Norasakkunkit Vinai
Graduate School of Human and Environmental Sciences, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.
Kokoro Research Center, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.
Front Psychol. 2019 Feb 26;10:312. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00312. eCollection 2019.
This study examines the compliance motivation of students and Freeters when facing a marginalization risk situation evoked by priming. Freeter (part-time employers), NEET (not in education, employment, or training), and Hikikomori (social withdrawal) represent the socio-economically marginalized population in Japan. People at higher risk of becoming NEET and Hikikomori have shown a motivation pattern deviant from mainstream Japanese culture, including lower willingness to conform to in-group members, thus showing less cultural fit (Norasakkunkit and Uchida, 2014). In this study we explore the effect of the macro socio-economic situation (job-hunting prospects being good or bad) on individual's compliance motivation in both students and Freeters. Sixty-five Kyoto University students and 74 Freeters were randomly assigned to one of the two priming conditions (marginalization risk or non-marginalization) before completing the NEET-Hikikomori Risk (NHR) scale and measurements of compliance motivation to conform to in-group members or to be self-consistent (Cialdini et al., 1999). Twenty-three control group students and 22 control group Freeters were also recruited online for comparison. Results showed that marginalization risk priming led to lower tendency to be self-consistent among students, but did not lead to lower tendency to conform to in-group members. For Freeters, marginalization risk priming led to higher compliance motivation to conform to in-group members. The results confirmed the framework proposed by Toivonen et al. (2011) that both Freeters and students in Japan have ritualist reactions, continuing to maintain the cultural norms despite the difficulty of attaining the cultural goals.
本研究考察了学生和自由职业者在面对由启动效应引发的边缘化风险情境时的顺从动机。自由职业者(兼职工作者)、啃老族(未接受教育、就业或培训)和蛰居族(社会退缩者)代表了日本社会经济层面的边缘化群体。面临成为啃老族和蛰居族风险更高的人群表现出一种与日本主流文化不同的动机模式,包括对与群体成员保持一致的意愿较低,因此文化契合度较低(诺拉萨昆基特和内田,2014)。在本研究中,我们探讨宏观社会经济状况(求职前景好坏)对学生和自由职业者个体顺从动机的影响。在完成啃老族 - 蛰居族风险(NHR)量表以及对与群体成员保持一致或自我一致的顺从动机测量之前,65名京都大学学生和74名自由职业者被随机分配到两种启动条件之一(边缘化风险或非边缘化)。另外还通过网络招募了23名对照组学生和22名对照组自由职业者进行比较。结果表明,边缘化风险启动效应导致学生自我一致的倾向降低,但并未导致与群体成员保持一致的倾向降低。对于自由职业者而言,边缘化风险启动效应导致与群体成员保持一致的顺从动机增强。研究结果证实了托伊沃宁等人(2011)提出的框架,即日本的自由职业者和学生都有仪式主义反应,尽管难以实现文化目标,但仍继续维持文化规范。