Austin W
J Pers Soc Psychol. 1979 Nov;37(11):2110-20. doi: 10.1037//0022-3514.37.11.2110.
A series of studies demonstrated a strong relationship among the situation-defining variable of degree of harm to victim, sexual configuration among participants, and bystanders' willingness to intervene to stop a theft. A pretest showed that a prior verbal commitment was absolutely necessary for intervention. The remaining data showed that high harm to a victim produced a high rate of intervention and showed strong sex differences in helping behavior in low-harm conditions. A high percentage of female bystanders helped in both low- and high-harm situations, whereas frequent helping by males was observed only when harm to the victim was high. Female victims elicited a significantly greater amount of helping, and sex of thief had no effect. A significant sex of bystander, sex of victim, and harm to victim interaction best describes the data. Results are interpreted in terms of different motivational sets held by males and females when they are responsible for the fate of others. Results also support the utility of an interactionist approach to the question of how individual and situational variables influence prosocial action.
一系列研究表明,受害者受伤害程度这一情境定义变量、参与者之间的性别组合以及旁观者干预盗窃行为的意愿之间存在密切关系。一项预测试表明,事先做出口头承诺对于干预行为绝对必要。其余数据显示,对受害者的高伤害导致了高干预率,并且在低伤害情况下,帮助行为存在显著的性别差异。在低伤害和高伤害情况下,高比例的女性旁观者都会提供帮助,而只有当受害者受到的伤害很高时,才会观察到男性频繁提供帮助。女性受害者得到的帮助明显更多,而盗窃者的性别则没有影响。旁观者性别、受害者性别以及受害者受伤害程度之间的显著交互作用最能解释这些数据。研究结果根据男性和女性在对他人命运负责时所秉持的不同动机集来进行解释。研究结果还支持了一种交互主义方法在个体和情境变量如何影响亲社会行为问题上的实用性。