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The Impact Of Social Exclusion On The Attitude Of Implicit Violence

Posted on:2018-11-26Degree:MasterType:Thesis
Country:ChinaCandidate:S N WangFull Text:PDF
GTID:2355330518491074Subject:Applied Psychology
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From the perspective of social psychology, our study based on requirements-threaten model studied the effect of the implicit violent attitude when the subjects were rejected by others. This paper explored the moderating effects of gender and power sense on implicit violence attitude in the context of social exclusion.Two studies were designed in the context of Chinese culture. In study one,100 subjects were collected, divided into two groups according to gender, and then the two groups were tested for Social exclusion and Social acceptance. In the end, the subjects finished the IAT test. The test of the implicit violent attitude is completed by calculating the response time difference to reflect the implicit attitude of the subject to violence.Study2 collected 80 male subjects, subjects were divided into social exclusion group and social acceptance group randomly, primed with Social exclusion, then primed with high or low power respectively, in the end, the subjects finished the IAT test. According to the two studies, results are:(1) Social exclusion will affect the implicit violence of the subjects, and the implicit violence of the subjects after the exclusion is enhanced.(2) Gender will affect the implicit violence attitude of the subjects, and compared with women, men tend to be more positive towards violence.(3) The sense of power will affect the implicit violence attitude of male subjects,compared with low power, high power to start the test of implicit attitude towards violence is more positive.(4) In the context of social exclusion, gender will affect the attitude of violence.Social exclusion can increase the male's implicit violence attitude, but it has no significant influence on women's implicit attitude.(5) In the context of social exclusion, a sense of power control will affect the attitude of male violence, low power start-up will significantly enhance the implicit violence attitude of men, and a high sense of power will start the implicit violence attitude slightly less male, but the difference was not significant.
Keywords/Search Tags:social exclusion, gender, implicit violent attitude, feelings of power, need-threat model
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