ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B
主办:中国心理学会
   中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理学报

• •    

位高寡助:权力感如何抑制网络利他行为

郑显亮, 宋子佳, 蔡若男, 刘志青   

  1. 赣南师范大学教育科学学院, 341000
  • 收稿日期:2025-04-03 修回日期:2026-03-01 接受日期:2026-03-10
  • 基金资助:
    国家社科基金项目(25BSH095)

High Status Rarely Helps Others: How does Sense of Power Inhibit Internet Altruistic Behavior

ZHENG Xianliang, SONG Zijia, CAI Ruonan, LIU Zhiqing   

  1. , 341000,
  • Received:2025-04-03 Revised:2026-03-01 Accepted:2026-03-10

摘要: 权力对现实利他行为的影响(抑制或促进),学界尚未达成共识。作为现实利他行为在数字空间的延伸,网络利他行为也可能受到权力的影响,但二者间的内在关系尚未得到充分探讨。本文通过三项研究系统考察权力感对网络利他行为的影响机制及其边界条件。研究1通过实验验证了权力感对网络利他行为的直接抑制作用;研究2采用双随机实验设计,发现公正敏感性在权力感与网络利他行为间起中介作用;研究3引入道德情绪变量,揭示了其在权力感与网络利他行为关系中的调节效应。研究结果深化了对网络利他行为内在机制的理解,并为促进网络环境中的利他行为提供了实证依据。

关键词: 网络利他行为, 权力感, 公正敏感性, 道德情绪

Abstract: The influence of sense of power on individuals’ altruistic behavior has long been a subject of debate. Scholars hold different views on whether power inhibits or promotes altruistic behavior. As an extension of real-world altruistic behavior in online contexts, Internet altruistic behavior may also be influenced by power, yet systematic research on this topic remains scarce. In particular, the underlying mechanisms through which sense of power affects Internet altruistic behavior have not been fully explored. Based on social cognitive theory, sense of power, as a perception of social relations, not only directly shapes individuals’ behavioral responses (e.g., Internet altruistic behavior) but may also exert indirect effects via individuals’ social cognition (e.g., justice sensitivity) or interact with individuals’ emotional experiences (e.g., moral emotions) to regulate behavior. Therefore, from the perspective of social relationship perception, this study integrates relevant theories on power to examine its effect on Internet altruistic behavior and further investigates the mediating role of justice sensitivity and the moderating role of moral emotions. This study tested the hypotheses through three experiments. Study 1 employed a power priming paradigm and a one-factor between-subjects design (high sense of power vs. low sense of power) to examine the direct effect of sense of power on Internet altruistic behavior. Study 2 adopted a dual-randomization design, incorporating two rigorous causal chain experiments to systematically explore the mediating role of justice sensitivity. First, power was manipulated, and justice sensitivity and Internet altruistic behavior were measured to preliminarily test the mediating effect. Then, justice sensitivity was further manipulated to assess its impact on Internet altruistic behavior, strengthening the causal inference regarding mediation. Study 3 introduced moral emotions as a moderating variable, employing a 2 (sense of power: high vs. low) × 3 (moral emotions: positive vs. neutral vs. negative) between-subjects design to examine how moral emotions moderate the effect of sense of power on Internet altruistic behavior. The results of the three experiments showed that: (1) individuals with a high sense of power exhibited significantly lower levels of Internet altruistic behavior compared to those with a low sense of power (Study 1); (2) justice sensitivity mediated the relationship between sense of power and Internet altruistic behavior (Study 2); and (3) moral emotions moderated the effect of sense of power on Internet altruistic behavior, with both positive and negative moral emotions significantly mitigating the negative predictive effect of power on Internet altruistic behavior (Study 3). This study contributes to both theoretical and practical domains. Theoretically, it deepens the understanding of the psychological mechanisms through which sense of power influences Internet altruistic behavior and addresses inconsistencies in previous research. Practically, by integrating justice sensitivity and moral emotions, this study highlights the importance of enhancing justice sensitivity and activating moral emotions to alleviate the potential negative impact of power on Internet altruistic behavior. These findings provide insights into promoting prosocial behavior in digital spaces.

Key words: Internet altruistic behavior, Sense of power, Justice sensitivity, Moral emotions