Department of Psychology, Rutgers University - New Brunswick, Piscataway, New Jersey, United States of America.
Psychological Sciences Department, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Sep 11;19(9):e0309687. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0309687. eCollection 2024.
Many people who are stigmatized along concealable features (e.g., sexual minorities or people with mental illness) anticipate social rejection due to their features and associated labels, and these beliefs are a prominent predictor of psychological distress. While ecological approaches to stigma research have highlighted the social basis of these two related outcomes, it typically has focused on the impact of non-stigmatized counterparts. Also embedded in the social environment are similarly-stigmatized others who, in concealing, may be less accessible to the individual. Given the centrality of psychological distress and rejection concerns as a relational self-conception in attachment theories, we tested if identity-based rejection sensitivity and distress may emerge from diminished access to similarly-stigmatized others as identity group members. Leveraging the University as a partially-controlled, naturalistic setting, we collected measures of concealment, identity-based rejection sensitivity, and psychological distress from undergraduate students in introductory psychology courses who reported a concealable stigmatized identity (N = 355; k = 15 identity groups). With concealment aggregated to the level of the identity group, multi-level modeling showed that concealment by similarly-stigmatized students was positively associated with both individuals' identity-based rejection sensitivity and their psychological distress. Moreover, rejection sensitivity mediated the association of group-level concealment and distress. Findings suggest that rejection concerns and distress may emerge from identity group inaccessibility in the social environment, with the association of concerns and distress possibly contextualized by underlying group attachment dynamics. Results reveal the identity group as a novel source of social influence in the lives of individuals with concealable stigmatized identities.
许多具有可隐藏特征(例如性少数群体或患有精神疾病的人)的人会因为他们的特征和相关标签而预感到社会排斥,而这些信念是心理困扰的一个重要预测因素。虽然对污名的生态方法研究强调了这两个相关结果的社会基础,但它通常侧重于非污名化对应者的影响。同样在社会环境中,具有类似污名的其他人也被嵌入其中,他们在隐瞒时可能对个人来说不太容易接触。鉴于心理困扰和拒绝担忧作为依恋理论中关系自我概念的核心,我们测试了身份认同拒绝敏感性和困扰是否可能源于作为身份群体成员的类似污名化他人的可及性降低。利用大学作为部分受控的自然主义环境,我们从参加入门心理学课程的本科生中收集了隐瞒、基于身份的拒绝敏感性和心理困扰的测量数据,他们报告了一个可隐藏的污名化身份(N=355;k=15 个身份群体)。随着对身份群体的隐瞒程度的聚合,多层次建模表明,类似污名化学生的隐瞒与个体的身份认同拒绝敏感性和心理困扰都呈正相关。此外,拒绝敏感性中介了群体层面隐瞒与困扰之间的关系。研究结果表明,拒绝关注和困扰可能源于社会环境中身份群体的不可及性,而关注和困扰的关联可能由潜在的群体依恋动态来具体说明。研究结果揭示了身份群体作为具有可隐藏污名身份的个体生活中的一个新的社会影响来源。