死亡率显著性
恐怖管理理论
心理学
归属
显著性(神经科学)
社会心理学
相互依存
文化多样性
亚裔美国人
自杀预防
毒物控制
发展心理学
认知心理学
民族
医学
社会学
社会科学
环境卫生
人类学
作者
Christine Ma-Kellams,Jim Blascovich
标识
DOI:10.1177/0956797611413935
摘要
Two experiments compared the effects of death thoughts, or mortality salience, on European and Asian Americans. Research on terror management theory has demonstrated that in Western cultural groups, individuals typically employ self-protective strategies in the face of death-related thoughts. Given fundamental East-West differences in self-construal (i.e., the independent vs. interdependent self), we predicted that members of Eastern cultural groups would affirm other people, rather than defend and affirm the self, after encountering conditions of mortality salience. We primed European Americans and Asian Americans with either a death or a control prime and examined the effect of this manipulation on attitudes about a person who violates cultural norms (Study 1) and on attributions about the plight of an innocent victim (Study 2). Mortality salience promoted culturally divergent responses, leading European Americans to defend the self and Asian Americans to defend other people.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI