Lu Kexin, Gao Yang, Ni Yichen, Li Hong
Mental Health Education and Counseling Center, Tongji University, Shanghai, China.
School of Public Management, Northwest University, Xi'an, China.
Front Psychol. 2025 Jul 24;16:1597502. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1597502. eCollection 2025.
During crises, individuals often exhibit elevated conformity, as evidenced by crowding, stampedes, and hoarding; however, the mechanisms driving this behavior remain underexplored. As Terror Management Theory suggests, behaviors that intensify after mortality salience serve as existential defenses. Drawing on TMT, this study posits that crisis-induced conformity arises as a defense against death anxiety. Coupled with evidence that conformity fulfills the fundamental need for affiliation, this research hypothesizes that conformity specifically functions as an affiliation defense through which individuals mitigate death-related anxiety in life-threatening contexts.
Four experiments were conducted to test the proposed three hypotheses. Study 1a employed scenario-based priming (crisis vs. daily situations) and self-report measures to investigate the elevated affiliation needs and conformity as affiliation defenses at two levels, in line with the mortality salience hypothesis. Study 1b used an improved TMT paradigm, replacing neutral controls with economic crisis manipulations to isolate existential threats from nonspecific emotional arousal. Study 2 elucidates the relationship between affiliation needs and conformity propensities in crisis contexts by investigating how experimental manipulation of affiliation influences conformity. Study 3 used a 2 (situation: crisis/control) × 2 (conformity/non-conformity) design to investigate the anxiety-buffering function of conformity.
Both Study 1a and 1b showed that crises significantly increased both affiliation needs and the tendency toward conformity. Study 2 revealed that the presence of dyadic companions during a crisis significantly attenuates individuals' affiliation needs toward crowds, while conformity propensities also significantly diminish. Study 3 found that crisis conformity reduced negative affects and increased positive emotions compared to non-conformity, while no such effects emerged in daily contexts.
These findings reveal the psychological mechanism of crisis conformity within the framework of TMT: crises increase affiliation needs and conformity (Studies 1a & 1b), consistent with the mortality salience hypothesis. The presence of evacuation companions during mortality-salient crises significantly attenuates affiliative needs toward crowds and correspondingly reduces conformity propensities (Study 2). Conformity as an affiliation defense mitigates negative affect and mortality anxiety while enhancing positive affect, thereby buffering psychological distress (Study 3). This study extends TMT to the field of crisis conformity research, providing a new perspective on interpreting the intrinsic motivation underlying crisis conformity.
在危机期间,个体往往表现出更高的从众性,如拥挤、踩踏和囤积行为所示;然而,驱动这种行为的机制仍未得到充分探索。正如恐怖管理理论所表明的,在死亡凸显后加剧的行为可作为存在性防御。基于恐怖管理理论,本研究认为危机引发的从众行为是作为对死亡焦虑的一种防御而出现的。再加上有证据表明从众行为满足了归属的基本需求,本研究假设从众行为具体作为一种归属防御机制,通过这种机制个体在危及生命的情境中减轻与死亡相关的焦虑。
进行了四项实验来检验所提出的三个假设。研究1a采用基于情景的启动(危机与日常情境)和自我报告测量方法,根据死亡凸显假设,在两个层面上调查增强的归属需求以及作为归属防御的从众行为。研究1b使用了改进的恐怖管理理论范式,用经济危机操纵取代中性对照,以将存在性威胁与非特定情绪唤醒区分开来。研究2通过调查归属的实验操纵如何影响从众行为,阐明危机情境中归属需求与从众倾向之间的关系。研究3采用2(情境:危机/对照)×2(从众/不从众)设计来研究从众行为的焦虑缓冲功能。
研究1a和1b均表明,危机显著增加了归属需求和从众倾向。研究2表明,危机期间二元同伴的存在显著减弱了个体对群体的归属需求,同时从众倾向也显著降低。研究3发现,与不从众相比,危机从众行为减少了负面影响并增加了积极情绪,而在日常情境中未出现此类影响。
这些发现揭示了恐怖管理理论框架内危机从众行为的心理机制:危机增加了归属需求和从众行为(研究1a和1b),这与死亡凸显假设一致。在死亡凸显的危机中疏散同伴的存在显著减弱了对群体的归属需求,并相应降低了从众倾向(研究2)。作为一种归属防御的从众行为减轻了负面影响和死亡焦虑,同时增强了积极情绪,从而缓冲了心理困扰(研究3)。本研究将恐怖管理理论扩展到危机从众行为研究领域,为解释危机从众行为背后的内在动机提供了一个新视角。