外群                        
                
                                
                        
                            心理学                        
                
                                
                        
                            社会心理学                        
                
                                
                        
                            内群和外群                        
                
                                
                        
                            背景(考古学)                        
                
                                
                        
                            识解                        
                
                                
                        
                            侵略                        
                
                                
                        
                            自我构念                        
                
                                
                        
                            群体冲突                        
                
                                
                        
                            种族(生物学)                        
                
                                
                        
                            亲社会行为                        
                
                                
                        
                            发展心理学                        
                
                                
                        
                            相互依存                        
                
                                
                        
                            解释水平理论                        
                
                                
                        
                            社会学                        
                
                                
                        
                            生物                        
                
                                
                        
                            性别研究                        
                
                                
                        
                            古生物学                        
                
                                
                        
                            社会科学                        
                
                        
                    
            作者
            
                Yuqing Zhou,Wenxin Li,Tianyu Gao,Xinyue Pan,Shihui Han            
         
                    
            出处
            
                                    期刊:Cerebral Cortex
                                                         [Oxford University Press]
                                                        日期:2023-05-04
                                                        卷期号:33 (13): 8759-8772
                                                 
         
        
    
            
            标识
            
                                    DOI:10.1093/cercor/bhad157
                                    
                                
                                 
         
        
                
            摘要
            
            Abstract Outgroup aggression characterizes intergroup conflicts in human societies. Previous research on relationships between cultural traits and outgroup aggression behavior showed inconsistent results, leaving open questions regarding whether cultural traits predict individual differences in outgroup aggression and related neural underpinnings. We conducted 2 studies to address this issue by collecting self-construal scores, EEG signals in response to Asian and White faces with painful or neutral expressions, and decisions to apply electric shocks to other-race individuals in a context of interracial conflict. We found that interdependent self-construals were well explained by 2 subcomponents, including esteem for group (EG) and relational interdependence (RI), which are related to focus on group collectives and harmonious relationships, respectively. Moreover, EG was positively associated with the decisions to punish racial outgroup targets, whereas RI was negatively related to the decisions. These opposite relationships were mediated by neural representations of perceived race at 120–160 ms after face onset. Our findings highlight the multifaceted nature of interdependent self-construal and the key role of neural representations of race in mediating the relationships of different subcomponents of cultural traits with racial outgroup punishment decisions in a context of interracial conflict.
         
            
 
                 
                
                    
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