Attitudes Toward Monsters

Jonathan R Gaber, S. Mallavarapu, B. Kirsner
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Abstract

The concept of monsters is ubiquitous across cultures, but there has been little research on monsters themselves and what factors shape people’s attitudes toward them. Kennesaw State University undergraduate psychology students (N = 450) read unbiased, positively biased, or negatively biased reports of one of 15 fictional monsters before all participants read identical stories about an encounter with the monster. Questionnaire responses indicated that reading a negatively biased report results in significantly more negative attitudes toward a monster than reading an unbiased report, that attitudes toward animals positively correlate with attitudes toward monsters, and that attitudes toward monsters differ depending on what real-life animals they most resemble. The results provide a greater understanding of how humans perceive and react to unfamiliar nonhumans, specifically those with characteristics of various animals, and suggest that research on animal-like monsters can elucidate human perceptions of real-life animals. Applications include identifying the best methods to counteract negative media images of animals, discovering a culture’s views on animals through the monsters in its folklore, and identifying in advance which unfamiliar endangered animals likely need the most publicity in order to engender public support.
对待怪物的态度
怪物的概念在各种文化中无处不在,但很少有人研究怪物本身以及是什么因素塑造了人们对它们的态度。肯尼索州立大学的心理学本科生(N = 450)在所有参与者阅读与怪物遭遇相同的故事之前,先阅读关于15个虚构怪物之一的无偏见、有积极偏见或有消极偏见的报道。问卷调查结果表明,与阅读无偏见的报告相比,阅读负面偏见的报告会导致人们对怪物的负面态度显著增加,对动物的态度与对怪物的态度呈正相关,对怪物的态度取决于它们与现实生活中最相似的动物。研究结果为人类如何感知和反应不熟悉的非人类,特别是那些具有各种动物特征的非人类,提供了更好的理解,并表明对动物类怪物的研究可以阐明人类对现实生活中动物的感知。应用程序包括找出最好的方法来抵消媒体对动物的负面形象,通过民间传说中的怪物发现一种文化对动物的看法,以及提前确定哪些不熟悉的濒危动物可能最需要宣传,以获得公众的支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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