Quiamzade Alain, Lalot Fanny
Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Faculty of Psychology, UniDistance Suisse, Brig, Switzerland.
Front Psychol. 2023 Jan 11;13:999959. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.999959. eCollection 2022.
The phenomenon of animalistic dehumanisation has been extensively studied in social psychology, but mostly as an intergroup relations tool used to justify the mistreatment of an outgroup. Surprisingly, however, dehumanisation has not been approached as an influence strategy to convince the ingroup to mistreat an outgroup. In the present article, we investigate these possible influence effects. We propose that a message depicting an outgroup in negative animalised terms would lead to lasting unfavourable outgroup attitudes because the animal essence conveyed through the message would immunise ingroup members against subsequent counterinfluence attempts. In one experimental study we compared the effect of three influence messages depicting a despised outgroup (Roma beggars) in negative animalised vs. negative humanised vs. positive humanised terms, followed by a counterpropaganda message advocating for Roma beggars' rights. Results show that the animalisation message leads to a lasting animalised perception of the outgroup (eliciting disgust and repugnancy) that resists exposure to the counterpropaganda positive message. In contrast, the negative humanisation message provokes a brief negative perception of the group (pre-counterpropaganda) that disappears after exposure to the counterpropaganda. The animalisation message also leads to more negative attitudes and discriminatory behavioural intentions towards Roma beggars expressed after the counterpropaganda message (i.e., discrimination in the workplace, hiring intentions, and social proximity), whilst the negative humanisation message does not, showing no difference with the positive humanisation message. These results suggest that animalistic dehumanisation indeed acts as an influence strategy, immunising targets against subsequent counterpropaganda attempts. We discuss implications in the light of essentialisation, forms of dehumanisation and group status, and current non-discriminatory norms.
动物化的非人化现象在社会心理学中已得到广泛研究,但大多是作为一种群体间关系工具,用于为对外群体的虐待行为进行辩解。然而,令人惊讶的是,非人化尚未被视为一种说服内群体虐待外群体的影响策略。在本文中,我们研究了这些可能的影响效应。我们提出,一条以负面动物化的方式描绘外群体的信息会导致对外群体产生持久的不利态度,因为该信息所传达的动物本质会使内群体成员对随后的反影响企图产生免疫。在一项实验研究中,我们比较了三条分别以负面动物化、负面人性化和正面人性化方式描绘一个受鄙视的外群体(罗姆乞丐)的影响信息的效果,随后是一条倡导罗姆乞丐权利的反宣传信息。结果表明,动物化信息会导致对外群体产生持久的动物化认知(引发厌恶和反感),这种认知能抵抗接触反宣传的正面信息。相比之下,负面人性化信息会引发对该群体的短暂负面认知(反宣传前),在接触反宣传信息后这种认知就会消失。动物化信息还会导致在反宣传信息之后对罗姆乞丐表现出更负面的态度和歧视性的行为意图(即职场歧视、雇佣意图和社会亲近度),而负面人性化信息则不会,与正面人性化信息没有差异。这些结果表明,动物化的非人化确实起到了一种影响策略的作用,使目标群体对随后的反宣传企图产生免疫。我们根据本质化、非人化的形式和群体地位以及当前的非歧视规范来讨论其影响。