The effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism

Given a local setting, the study attempted to assess the effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism. The independent variables of racial accent and dependency were manipulated by the researchers whereas sex and race were...

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Main Authors: Bonpin, Ed Walter, Manabat, Winston, Paz, Eliseo
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 1983
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_honors/12
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_honors-10112022-02-14T09:35:56Z The effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism Bonpin, Ed Walter Manabat, Winston Paz, Eliseo Given a local setting, the study attempted to assess the effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism. The independent variables of racial accent and dependency were manipulated by the researchers whereas sex and race were ex post facto variables aggressiveness and altruism were the dependent variables of the study. To provide a causal-comparative analysis of the abovementioned variables, a 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 field experiment research design was utilized. 320 subjects were randomly chosen from the 1983-84 Metro Manila Telephone Directory (Section A). The subjects were randomly assigned to four experimental conditions Chinese Accent - Dependent Chinese Accented - Non Dependent Pilipino Accent - Dependent and Pilipino Accent - Non Dependent. Each subject was rated by two independent judges using a self-constructed rating scale. To determine the reliability of the two judges, a simple percentage reliability formula was used. A four-way analysis of variance was employed in analyzing data. The results of the study indicate significant effects of sex and race of subjects on aggressiveness. It was found that Filipinos tend to be more aggressive than Chinese. Moreover, males showed more aggressiveness than females. Neither racial accent nor dependency made a difference in the aggressive reactions to a wrong number phone call, indicating that the results did not approach statistical significance. However, interaction effects show that: (1) Filipino showed more aggressiveness to a caller with a Chinese accent (2) Filipino males were more aggressive to a caller with a Chinese accent (3) Filipino males were more aggressive to a dependent caller and (4) Filipinos were more aggressive to a non-dependent caller with a Chinese accent. The results imply that differences which might have been due to sex stereotypes and racial prejudices affect aggressive behavior. Furthermore, the results of the study show significant effects of race of subject on altruism, indicating that Chinese tend to give help more than Filipinos do. Moreover, Chinese were more helpful to a caller with a Chinese accent and they showed more predisposition to help a non-dependent caller. The results imply preferences in help giving as evident from the altruistic responses of Chinese. 1983-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_honors/12 Honors Theses English Animo Repository Aggressiveness Altruism Helping behavior Psychology
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Aggressiveness
Altruism
Helping behavior
Psychology
spellingShingle Aggressiveness
Altruism
Helping behavior
Psychology
Bonpin, Ed Walter
Manabat, Winston
Paz, Eliseo
The effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism
description Given a local setting, the study attempted to assess the effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism. The independent variables of racial accent and dependency were manipulated by the researchers whereas sex and race were ex post facto variables aggressiveness and altruism were the dependent variables of the study. To provide a causal-comparative analysis of the abovementioned variables, a 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 field experiment research design was utilized. 320 subjects were randomly chosen from the 1983-84 Metro Manila Telephone Directory (Section A). The subjects were randomly assigned to four experimental conditions Chinese Accent - Dependent Chinese Accented - Non Dependent Pilipino Accent - Dependent and Pilipino Accent - Non Dependent. Each subject was rated by two independent judges using a self-constructed rating scale. To determine the reliability of the two judges, a simple percentage reliability formula was used. A four-way analysis of variance was employed in analyzing data. The results of the study indicate significant effects of sex and race of subjects on aggressiveness. It was found that Filipinos tend to be more aggressive than Chinese. Moreover, males showed more aggressiveness than females. Neither racial accent nor dependency made a difference in the aggressive reactions to a wrong number phone call, indicating that the results did not approach statistical significance. However, interaction effects show that: (1) Filipino showed more aggressiveness to a caller with a Chinese accent (2) Filipino males were more aggressive to a caller with a Chinese accent (3) Filipino males were more aggressive to a dependent caller and (4) Filipinos were more aggressive to a non-dependent caller with a Chinese accent. The results imply that differences which might have been due to sex stereotypes and racial prejudices affect aggressive behavior. Furthermore, the results of the study show significant effects of race of subject on altruism, indicating that Chinese tend to give help more than Filipinos do. Moreover, Chinese were more helpful to a caller with a Chinese accent and they showed more predisposition to help a non-dependent caller. The results imply preferences in help giving as evident from the altruistic responses of Chinese.
format text
author Bonpin, Ed Walter
Manabat, Winston
Paz, Eliseo
author_facet Bonpin, Ed Walter
Manabat, Winston
Paz, Eliseo
author_sort Bonpin, Ed Walter
title The effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism
title_short The effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism
title_full The effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism
title_fullStr The effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism
title_full_unstemmed The effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism
title_sort effects of the sex and race of subject and the racial accent and dependency of confederate on aggressiveness and altruism
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 1983
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_honors/12
_version_ 1726158425835962368