|
1. |
The Influence of Decision Makers' Goals on Their Concerns About Procedural Justice1 |
|
Journal of Applied Social Psychology,
Volume 21,
Issue 20,
1991,
Page 1629-1658
Tom R. Tyler,
Eugene Griffin,
Preview
|
PDF (1241KB)
|
|
摘要:
Two studies examine how decision makers' goals of enhancing organizational effectiveness and promoting positive interpersonal relations shape their decision making when they are allocating scarce resources among group members. Past research has conceptualized this problem as one of balancing between the use of two distributive justice principles: equity and equality. The studies reported examine the degree to which authorities are also concerned about issues of procedural justice. The results suggest that experienced decision makers—both managerial and administrative—believe that when trying to maintain positive interpersonal relations it is as important to use decision‐making procedures that will be regarded as fair (procedural justice) as it is to allocate outcomes in ways which will be regarded as fair (distributive justice). Decision makers' definitions of procedural justice are also exa
ISSN:0021-9029
DOI:10.1111/j.1559-1816.1991.tb00496.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1991
数据来源: WILEY
|
2. |
Sex Differences in Stereotypes of Spectacles1 |
|
Journal of Applied Social Psychology,
Volume 21,
Issue 20,
1991,
Page 1659-1680
Mary B. Harris,
Preview
|
PDF (1002KB)
|
|
摘要:
Sex differences in the stereotype of eyeglasses were investigated via a three‐part questionnaire administered to 217 adults. In the first part, subjects viewed one of five males or five females wearing glasses or not and rated this individual on a number of descriptors as well as guessing his or her three favorite pastimes. In the second part male and female subjects with and without glasses were compared on self‐evaluations of the same descriptors and activities. They also responded to open‐ended questions concerning their reasons for using spectacles and contact lenses and the effects of these visual correctives on their self‐perceptions and the perceptions of others. In the third part subjects evaluated a typical woman and a typical man with glasses on the same descriptors.These three methods of identifying sex differences in stereotypes of eyeglasses produced somewhat conflicting results. Photographs with glasses were judged as less attractive and sexy, but males considered the typical woman with glasses as sexier and more attractive than the typical woman without glasses. Generally, people with glasses were considered to be more intelligent and intense, and the stereotypes of the typical woman and man with glasses were highly positive. Women with glasses were viewed as more feminine and men with glasses as more masculine. Although wearing glasses affected the self‐concept of females more than males, there was little evidence that they experienced a more negative “spectacle image
ISSN:0021-9029
DOI:10.1111/j.1559-1816.1991.tb00497.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1991
数据来源: WILEY
|
3. |
A Comparison of Anglo‐American and Mexican‐American Jurors' Judgments of Mothers Who Fail to Protect Their Children from Abuse1 |
|
Journal of Applied Social Psychology,
Volume 21,
Issue 20,
1991,
Page 1681-1698
Harmon M. Hosch,
Gloria J. Chanez,
Robert K. Bothwell,
Henry Munoz,
Preview
|
PDF (909KB)
|
|
摘要:
Two studies were conducted to determine if people with an individualist cultural background differ from those with a collectivist cultural background (Triandis, 1990) in their adjudication of mothers who fail to protect their children from abuse. In the first study, 452 students evaluated the case of a mother accused of failure to protect her son from physical abuse. In the second study, an additional 334 subjects considered a case of a mother's failure to protect her daughter from sexual abuse. While the verdicts depended on the gender of the juror, female jurors were significantly more likely to convict the defendant; the verdict was independent of ethnicity. However, ethnicity did influence sentencing and whether the juror recommended that the defendant serve time. The results are discussed in terms of cultural influences on discretionary decisions.
ISSN:0021-9029
DOI:10.1111/j.1559-1816.1991.tb00498.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1991
数据来源: WILEY
|
4. |
Mediators in the Relationship Between Parental and Peer Characteristics and Beer Drinking by Early Adolescents1 |
|
Journal of Applied Social Psychology,
Volume 21,
Issue 20,
1991,
Page 1699-1711
Susan T. Ennett,
Karl E. Bauman,
Preview
|
PDF (638KB)
|
|
摘要:
Social learning theory suggests that parents and peers influence adolescent drinking directly by providing social reinforcement and models for imitation, and indirectly by first influencing various expectations adolescents form about drinking. In this study, longitudinal data were used to investigate several mediators that could account for the relationships between adolescent beer drinking and parent and peer drinking behaviors and attitudes. The results show that peer drinking indirectly influences adolescent drinking by shaping adolescents' norms on drinking, drinking preferences, and expected consequences of drinking related to friends and problem behavior, whereas parental alcohol use and peer attitude toward alcohol largely directly influence adolescent beer drinking. The results suggest that influence is in large part direct or indirect depending on the source of the influence. In addition, different types of mediators may account for different relationships.
ISSN:0021-9029
DOI:10.1111/j.1559-1816.1991.tb00499.x
出版商:Blackwell Publishing Ltd
年代:1991
数据来源: WILEY
|
|