Enock Florence E, Over Harriet
The Alan Turing Institute, London, UK.
University of York, York, North Yorkshire, UK.
R Soc Open Sci. 2023 Jul 12;10(7):230203. doi: 10.1098/rsos.230203. eCollection 2023 Jul.
In propaganda and hate speech, target groups are often compared to dangerous and disgusting animals. Exposure to these animalistic slurs is thought to increase endorsement of intergroup harm but the mechanism by which this happens remains unclear. Across two pre-registered and highly powered studies, we examined how animalistic language influences the cultural transmission of beliefs about target groups. In line with previous work, we found that describing a novel political group with animalistic slurs increased the extent to which participants endorsed harm towards them. Importantly, reading animalistic slurs did not influence the extent to which participants believed the target group possessed uniquely human qualities. Rather, the animalistic slurs influenced endorsement of harm by making the target group appear more undesirable. These findings offer a novel perspective into the nature of dehumanization and new insights into how hate speech functions.
在宣传和仇恨言论中,目标群体常常被比作危险且令人厌恶的动物。接触这些带有兽性的诋毁言论被认为会增加对群体间伤害的认可,但其中的发生机制仍不清楚。在两项预先注册且功效强大的研究中,我们探究了带有兽性的语言如何影响对目标群体信念的文化传播。与先前的研究一致,我们发现用带有兽性的诋毁言论描述一个新的政治团体,会增加参与者认可对其造成伤害的程度。重要的是,阅读带有兽性的诋毁言论并未影响参与者认为目标群体具备独特人类特质的程度。相反,带有兽性的诋毁言论通过使目标群体显得更不受欢迎,从而影响了对伤害行为的认可。这些发现为去人性化的本质提供了新视角,也为仇恨言论的作用方式带来了新见解。