Graham S, Juvonen J
Department of Education, University of California, Los Angeles 90095-1521, USA.
Dev Psychol. 1998 May;34(3):587-99. doi: 10.1037//0012-1649.34.3.587.
Relations between characterological versus behavioral self-blaming attributions for victimization and maladjustment were examined in middle school students. Respondents completed a questionnaire that assessed self-perceptions of victim status, attributions for hypothetical incidents of victimization, and feelings of loneliness, social anxiety, and low self-worth. They also completed peer nomination procedures measuring perceptions of victimization in others, as well as peer acceptance and rejection. Self-perceived victimization was associated with characterological self-blame, loneliness, anxiety, and low self-worth. Peer-perceived victimization, in contrast, was related to acceptance and rejection. The data suggest that self-views are more predictive of the intrapersonal consequences of victimization (loneliness, anxiety, low self-worth), whereas peer views are more predictive of interpersonal consequences (peer acceptance and rejection).
研究人员考察了中学生中性格方面与行为方面的自责归因对受欺负及适应不良的影响。受访者完成了一份问卷,该问卷评估了对受害者身份的自我认知、对假设受欺负事件的归因,以及孤独感、社交焦虑和低自尊感。他们还完成了同伴提名程序,以测量对他人受欺负的认知,以及同伴的接纳和排斥情况。自我认知的受欺负与性格方面的自责、孤独感、焦虑和低自尊有关。相比之下,同伴认知的受欺负与接纳和排斥有关。数据表明,自我认知更能预测受欺负的人际后果(孤独感、焦虑、低自尊),而同伴认知更能预测人际后果(同伴接纳和排斥)。