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这种帮助会有用吗?在美国和日本向陌生人提供援助。

Will This Help Be Helpful? Giving Aid to Strangers in the United States and Japan.

作者信息

Niiya Yu, Handron Caitlin, Markus Hazel Rose

机构信息

Faculty of Global and Interdisciplinary Studies, Hosei University, Tokyo, Japan.

Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States.

出版信息

Front Psychol. 2022 Jan 25;12:784858. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.784858. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Japanese rank among the least likely to intervene to help a stranger in a non-emergency situation while Americans rank among the most likely. Across four studies, we demonstrate that Japanese are less likely to offer help to strangers because their decisions rely more heavily on the assessment of the needs of others. Accordingly, when there is uncertainty about the need for help, Japanese are less likely to intervene than Americans because without an understanding of the needs of recipient, the impact of intervention may also be harmful. When the situation is unambiguous, Japanese and Americans are equally likely to help. This divergence in readiness to help strangers elaborates the understanding of why people in Japanese contexts are more likely than those in United States contexts to attend to the situation and to avoid uncertain situations. It also illuminates cultural differences in models of agency-implicit understandings of when and why a person should act to aid another.

摘要

在非紧急情况下,日本人是最不愿意干预以帮助陌生人的群体之一,而美国人则是最愿意的群体之一。在四项研究中,我们证明,日本人不太可能向陌生人提供帮助,因为他们的决定更多地依赖于对他人需求的评估。因此,当对帮助的需求存在不确定性时,日本人比美国人更不可能进行干预,因为如果不了解受助者的需求,干预的影响可能也是有害的。当情况明确时,日本人和美国人提供帮助的可能性是一样的。这种在帮助陌生人意愿上的差异,进一步说明了为什么在日本环境中的人比在美国环境中的人更有可能关注情况并避免不确定的情况。它还揭示了行为模式中文化差异——关于一个人何时以及为何应该采取行动帮助他人的隐性理解。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/aba1/8821533/edec71be0749/fpsyg-12-784858-g001.jpg

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