Journal of Psychological Science ›› 2022, Vol. 45 ›› Issue (3): 635-642.

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Self-other Decision-making Differences in high school students’ Subject Choice: The Role of Anticipatory Guilt

  

  • Received:2022-01-29 Revised:2022-04-10 Online:2022-05-20 Published:2022-05-22
  • Contact: Dao-Qun DING

高中生选科的自我-他人决策差异:预期内疚的作用

张湘一1,韩梦琳1,周灿2,陈锡友3,丁道群3   

  1. 1. 湖南师范大学
    2. 广东省佛山市南山湖实验中学
    3. 湖南师范大学教育科学学院
  • 通讯作者: 丁道群

Abstract: Subject choice has become an important decision the high school students faced, and most students are troubled by the conflict between subject difficulty and interest when making a subject choice. Previous studies have mainly focused on decisions for the self, paying less attention to decisions for others. However, individuals are not only faced with choosing subject for themselves, but also often giving the other people advice on how to make a subject choice, or directly make decisions on behalf of others. Therefore, the self-other decision-making differences in high school students’ subject choice gradually become one of the hot issues in the field of decision. The present studies aim to investigate self-other decision-making differences in high school students’ subject choice, and the role of anticipatory guilt in such differences. In study 1, 440 senior grade one students were recruited to participate in this study. Seventy-three participants were excluded from the analyses because they doubted the authenticity of the subject choice on the post-experiment self-report questionnaire. The remaining 367 participants were included in the analyses, including 178 participants in the self-condition and 189 participants in the other-condition. In the self-condition, participants were asked to rate the possibility that they chose four types of subjects. In the other condition, participants were asked to rate the possibility that a student who is wholly unfamiliar to them chose such subjects. Results revealed that self-other decision-making discrepancies were only observed in the subjects with high difficulty and high interest and the subjects with low difficulty and low interest. Participants were more inclined to choose a subject with low difficulty and low interest for themselves, whereas choose a subject with high difficulty and high interest for others. The study 2 aims to investigate the effect of social distance on self-other decision-making discrepancies in subject choice and the psychological mechanism underlying such an effect. 541 senior grade one students were recruited and randomly assigned to the self, friend, or stranger conditions. Due to 41 individuals doubted the authenticity of the subject choice, 35 individuals chosen extreme values and 21 individuals gave incomplete replies, and thus the remaining 444 participants were included in the analyses, including 144 participants in the self-condition, 151 participants in the friend-condition and 149 participants in the stranger-condition. Participants were required to give a response to which subject selected would make them feel more guilt, as well as the preference of subject choice. Results showed that individuals prefer to the subjects with low difficulty and low interest when deciding for themselves, whereas they prefer to the subjects with high difficulty and high interest when making decisions for a stranger, and the self-other decision-making differences were diminished when subject choice was made for close others (i.e., friends). In addition, study 2 demonstrated that anticipatory guilt was responsible for self-other decision-making differences in subject choice. To sum up, the present study provides the first evidence that there are self-other decision-making differences in high school students’ subject choice. Our findings not only expand the research scope of self-other discrepancies in decision making, but also provide scientific evidence for optimizing individual subject choice, and thus contribute to intensify the understanding of human social decision-making.

Key words: self-other decision-making differences, subject choice, high school students, anticipatory guilt

摘要: 本研究首次探讨高中生选科的自我-他人决策差异。结果发现:(1)当科目难度与兴趣存在冲突时,个体倾向于为自己选择低难度低兴趣科目,而为他人选择高难度高兴趣科目;(2)自我-他人决策差异存在程度效应:为近的社会距离他人(朋友)选科时自我-他人决策差异缩小;(3)预期内疚在高中生选科的自我-他人决策差异中起中介作用:相较于为自己选科,为陌生人选择低难度低兴趣科目诱发更高的预期内疚,从而降低其为陌生人选择低难度低兴趣科目的偏好。这些发现拓展了自我-他人决策差异的研究范畴,对家长、学校和教育咨询公司的选科指导具有一定的参考价值。

关键词: 自我-他人决策差异, 选科, 高中生, 预期内疚