心理科学 ›› 2024, Vol. 47 ›› Issue (1): 142-150.DOI: 10.16719/j.cnki.1671-6981.20240117

• 社会、人格与管理 • 上一篇    下一篇

内隐信念感知对人际冲突中先发制人行为的影响:希望的中介作用*

谢周秀甜, 王镇铖, 林莉娜, 刘雷**   

  1. 宁波大学心理学系暨研究所,宁波大学群体行为与社会心理服务研究中心,宁波,315211
  • 出版日期:2024-01-20 发布日期:2024-01-30
  • 通讯作者: **刘雷,E-mail: liulei@nbu.edu.cn
  • 基金资助:
    *本研究得到浙江省哲学社会科学规划项目(22NDJC066YB)、宁波大学省属高校基本科研业务费项目(SJWY2021007)和宁波大学科研创新基金项目(IF2022033)的资助

The Influence of Implicit Belief Perception on Preemptive Strikes in Interpersonal Conflict: The Mediating Role of Hope

Xie Zhouxiutian, Wang Zhencheng, Lin Lina, Liu Lei   

  1. Department of Psychology, Ningbo University; Center of Group Behavior and Social Psychological Service, Ningbo University, Ningbo, 315211
  • Online:2024-01-20 Published:2024-01-30

摘要: 本研究考察了在人际冲突情境中,内隐信念感知对先发制人行为的影响,并且探讨了希望的中介作用。实验1让被试阅读与冲突相关的文章来启动“威胁性冲突是变化的或不变的”的内隐信念,实验2则在不直接提及冲突的情况下启动“世界是变化的或不变的”的内隐信念。两项实验结果均发现,在人际冲突情境中,相对于持有不变内隐信念的个体,持有变化内隐信念的个体体验到更高的希望水平,更少做出先发制人行为;希望在内隐信念感知与先发制人行为的因果关系间起完全中介作用。本研究有助于人们找到解决防御性攻击问题的方法,促进人际和谐。

关键词: 先发制人行为, 内隐信念, 希望, 人际冲突

Abstract: Preemptive strikes are actions to eliminate or reduce the potential threat by a costly act, resulting in harm to others. While managing interpersonal conflicts, individuals prefer preemptive strikes to reduce or eliminate what they may perceive as a threat. Yet, it may cost individuals to initiate a preemptive strike and may find themselves in a substantially worse situation after launching a preemptive strike. It is unfortunate that such pricey and destructive preemptive strikes are prevalent in daily interpersonal interactions. The goals of this research were to explore the effects of perceived implicit beliefs on interpersonal preemptive strikes in interpersonal conflict situations using two experiments and to examine the mediation role of hope.
In both experiments, a one-way between-subjects design was used, with the independent variable in Experiment 1 being the implicit belief that threatening conflict is changing/unchanging and the independent variable in Experiment 2 being the implicit belief that the world is changing or unchanging. The dependent variable in both experiments was preemptive strikes, which was measured by the proportion of people who pressed the red button. The mediating variable in both experiments was the hope of subjects in each experimental condition. In Experiment 1, subjects were asked to manipulate their perceptions of implicit beliefs about threatening conflict by reading an article presented in a news form highlighting that "threatening conflict is changing" or "threatening conflict is unchanged". Some studies, however, have suggested that those who did not directly refer to conflict situations, but merely believed that the world is a dynamic and constantly changing place, were more likely to experience hope in the conflicts. Consequently, they were more inclined to make amends with their conflict opponents. Therefore, in Experiment 2, we manipulated implicit beliefs about a changing and unchanging world successfully by building a more neutral intervention.
The findings of Experiment 1 indicated that in interpersonal conflict situations, people with the implicit belief that threatening conflict is constant more often preferred preemptive strikes than people with the implicit belief that threatening conflict is variable. Moreover, individuals with "threatening conflict is changing" implicit beliefs had significantly higher hope than those with "threatening conflict is constant" implicit beliefs. Hope fully mediated the causal relationship between the perception of threatening conflict implicit beliefs and preemptive strikes.
The results of Experiment 2 revealed that in situations of interpersonal conflict, people with unchanging world implicit beliefs were more probably to initiate a preemptive strike than people with changing world implicit beliefs. In addition, individuals who hold implicit beliefs about a changing world have significantly more hope relative to individuals who hold implicit beliefs about an unchanging world. Hope fully mediated the causal relationship between implicit beliefs about a changing world and preemptive strikes.
The results of these two experiments suggest that when people hold implicit beliefs about change, they experience higher levels of hope, which in turn reduces the likelihood of individuals initiating preemptive strikes. This study has illustrated one such mechanism for promoting peace: by indirectly inducing people to believe that conflict or the world is changing, increasing hope people would experience successfully reduced the tendency of individuals to initiate preemptive strikes in interpersonal conflicts. This study helps people to find solutions to the problem of defensive aggression, and thus to facilitate conflict resolution.

Key words: preemptive strikes, implicit belief, hope, interpersonal conflict