Sefidgar Yasaman S, Seo Woosuk, Kuehn Kevin S, Althoff Tim, Browning Anne, Riskin Eve, Nurius Paula S, Dey Anind K, Mankoff Jennifer
University of Washington, USA.
University of Michigan, USA.
Proc ACM Hum Comput Interact. 2019 Nov;3(CSCW):1-29. doi: 10.1145/3359216. Epub 2019 Nov 7.
A deep understanding of how discrimination impacts psychological health and well-being of students could allow us to better protect individuals at risk and support those who encounter discrimination. While the link between discrimination and diminished psychological and physical well-being is well established, existing research largely focuses on chronic discrimination and long-term outcomes. A better understanding of the short-term behavioral correlates of discrimination events could help us to concretely quantify such experiences, which in turn could support policy and intervention design. In this paper we specifically examine, for the first time, what behaviors change and in what ways in relation to discrimination. We use actively-reported and passively-measured markers of health and well-being in a sample of 209 first-year college students over the course of two academic quarters. We examine changes in indicators of psychological state in relation to reports of unfair treatment in terms of five categories of behaviors: physical activity, phone usage, social interaction, mobility, and sleep. We find that students who encounter unfair treatment become more physically active, interact more with their phone in the morning, make more calls in the evening, and spend more time in bed on the day of the event. Some of these patterns continue the next day. Our results further our understanding of the impact of discrimination and can inform intervention work.
深入了解歧视如何影响学生的心理健康和幸福感,有助于我们更好地保护处于风险中的个体,并支持那些遭遇歧视的人。虽然歧视与心理和身体健康状况下降之间的联系已得到充分证实,但现有研究主要集中在长期歧视和长期后果上。更好地理解歧视事件的短期行为关联,有助于我们具体量化这些经历,进而为政策制定和干预措施设计提供支持。在本文中,我们首次专门研究了与歧视相关的行为会发生哪些变化以及如何变化。我们在两个学术季度的时间里,对209名一年级大学生样本使用了主动报告和被动测量的健康及幸福感指标。我们从身体活动、手机使用、社交互动、出行和睡眠这五类行为方面,研究了心理状态指标与不公平待遇报告之间的变化关系。我们发现,遭遇不公平待遇的学生在事件当天会变得更加活跃,早上与手机互动更多,晚上打电话更多,在床上花费的时间也更多。其中一些模式在第二天仍会持续。我们的研究结果进一步加深了我们对歧视影响的理解,并可为干预工作提供参考。