School of Journalism and Communication, Wuhan University, Wuhan, China.
Int J Psychol. 2024 Oct;59(5):717-725. doi: 10.1002/ijop.13140. Epub 2024 May 17.
Evidence about impact of birth order on risk-taking is mostly from the Western cultural contexts, and the findings are contradictory. Scant attention has been devoted to the impact of birth order on risk-taking in East Asian societies influenced by Confucian culture. In this study, we investigated how birth order impacts adult risk-taking using a representative Chinese sample (N = 12,756). The results revealed that the effect of birth order on Chinese risk-taking did not exhibit a linear trend, either when the birth order was coded using the original birth rank or when coded as firstborns, middleborns and lastborns. However, this study found that laterborns, as a whole, were more likely to take risks than firstborns. In addition, there was a quadratic trend inherent in the birth order effect on risk-taking, showing that middleborns were more likely to take risks than firstborns or lastborns. Furthermore, we found that the birth order effects on risk-taking were not affected by individuals' age, birth spacing and family size. Additional analyses also demonstrated the robustness of these results. Our findings established a small but meaningful association between birth order and risk-taking in a Confucian-influenced society.
关于出生顺序对冒险行为影响的证据主要来自西方文化背景,而且研究结果相互矛盾。在受儒家文化影响的东亚社会中,对出生顺序对冒险行为的影响关注甚少。本研究使用具有代表性的中国样本(N=12756),调查了出生顺序对成人冒险行为的影响。结果表明,出生顺序对中国风险承担的影响既不是线性的,也不是原始出生顺序编码,也不是编码为长子、次子和幼子。然而,本研究发现,整体而言,晚生子女比长子更有可能冒险。此外,出生顺序对风险承担的影响存在二次趋势,表明次子比长子或幼子更有可能冒险。此外,我们发现,出生顺序对风险承担的影响不受个体年龄、出生间隔和家庭规模的影响。进一步的分析也证明了这些结果的稳健性。我们的研究结果在一个受儒家文化影响的社会中建立了一个小而有意义的出生顺序与冒险行为之间的关联。