个性特征、价值观和同理心:乳蛋素食者和纯素食者的差异。

Forschende Komplementarmedizin Pub Date : 2016-01-01 Epub Date: 2016-04-12 DOI:10.1159/000445369
Christian S Kessler, Sophie Holler, Sebastian Joy, Anand Dhruva, Andreas Michalsen, Gustav Dobos, Holger Cramer
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引用次数: 59

摘要

背景:素食营养在世界范围内越来越受到公众的关注。虽然一些研究调查了素食者和杂食者在动机和性格特征上的差异,但只有很少的研究考虑了两个最大的素食亚群:乳蛋素食者和纯素食者在动机和性格特征上的差异。目的:研究乳蛋素食者和纯素食者在动机、价值观、同理心和人格特征的分布模式上的差异。方法:于2014年1月进行匿名在线调查。素食者和纯素食者在选择营养方式的初始动机、健康相关生活质量(世界卫生组织生活质量bref (WHOQOL-BREF))、人格特征(大五量表- soep (BFI-S))、价值观(肖像价值问卷(PVQ))和共情(共情量表)方面的组间差异采用单变量协方差分析;对多重检验的P值进行调整。结果:10184人完成调查;4427人(43.5%)是素食者,4822人(47.3%)是纯素食者。关于选择营养方法的最初动机,纯素食者认为食物味道、对动物的热爱和全球/人道主义原因更重要,而社会环境的影响比素食者更不重要。与素食者相比,素食者在WHOQOL-BREF的生理、心理和社会生活质量得分更高,在BFI-S的神经质得分较低,开放性得分较高。在PVQ中,纯素食者在权力/力量、成就、安全、顺从和传统方面的得分低于素食者,而在自决和普遍主义方面得分更高。纯素食者的同理心高于素食者(p < 0.001)。讨论:这项调查表明,纯素食者具有更开放和兼容的个性特征,更普遍,更有同情心,更有道德导向,与素食者相比,他们的生活质量略高。鉴于这些差异的绝对规模较小,需要进一步研究来评估这些群体差异是否与日常生活相关,是否可以在其他人群中得到证实。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Personality Profiles, Values and Empathy: Differences between Lacto-Ovo-Vegetarians and Vegans.

Background: Vegetarian nutrition is gaining increasing public attention worldwide. While some studies have examined differences in motivations and personality traits between vegetarians and omnivores, only few studies have considered differences in motivations and personality traits between the 2 largest vegetarian subgroups: lacto-ovo-vegetarians and vegans.

Objectives: To examine differences between lacto-ovo-vegetarians and vegans in the distribution patterns of motives, values, empathy, and personality profiles.

Methods: An anonymous online survey was performed in January 2014. Group differences between vegetarians and vegans in their initial motives for the choice of nutritional approaches, health-related quality of life (World Health Organization Quality of Life-BREF (WHOQOL-BREF)), personality traits (Big Five Inventory-SOEP (BFI-S)), values (Portraits Value Questionnaire (PVQ)), and empathy (Empathizing Scale) were analyzed by univariate analyses of covariance; P values were adjusted for multiple testing.

Results: 10,184 individuals completed the survey; 4,427 (43.5%) were vegetarians and 4,822 (47.3%) were vegans. Regarding the initial motives for the choice of nutritional approaches, vegans rated food taste, love of animals, and global/humanitarian reasons as more important, and the influence of their social environment as less important than did vegetarians. Compared to vegetarians, vegans had higher values on physical, psychological, and social quality of life on the WHOQOL-BREF, and scored lower on neuroticism and higher on openness on the BFI-S. In the PVQ, vegans scored lower than vegetarians on power/might, achievement, safety, conformity, and tradition and higher on self-determination and universalism. Vegans had higher empathy than vegetarians (all p < 0.001).

Discussion: This survey suggests that vegans have more open and compatible personality traits, are more universalistic, empathic, and ethically oriented, and have a slightly higher quality of life when compared to vegetarians. Given the small absolute size of these differences, further research is needed to evaluate whether these group differences are relevant in everyday life and can be confirmed in other populations.

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Forschende Komplementarmedizin
Forschende Komplementarmedizin 医学-全科医学与补充医学
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