Frontiers in Psychology (Sep 2022)

How prosocial behaviors are maintained in China: The relationship between communist authority and prosociality

  • Jing Sheng,
  • Shuilian Luo,
  • Bo Jiang,
  • Yousong Hu,
  • Shuang Lin,
  • Li Wang,
  • Yashi Ren,
  • Chunling Zhao,
  • Zixin Liu,
  • Zixin Liu,
  • Jun Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.938468
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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ObjectiveNumerous studies have demonstrated that religious belief is associated with prosocial behavior. However, how do they maintain cooperation in societies with a predominating atheist population, such as China? Different primings (explicit, subliminal, implicit) and a quasi-experiment are used to examine the link between communist authority and prosocial behaviors among college students in China.Materials and methodsIn Study 1 (N = 398), the subjects’ communist authority in the university lab was primed by a communist-authority video. In Study 2 (N = 296), we compared the priming effects of communist authority and religion on prosocial intention. Study 3 (N = 311) investigated the priming effect of communist authority on prosocial behaviors by employing a scrambled sentence task in the university lab. A quasi-experiment was conducted in Study 4 (N = 313).ResultsResults showed that communist-authority, a reminder of secular authorities, increased prosociality among college students. And empathy moderated the relationship between secular authorities and prosociality in Study 3 and Study 4.DiscussionCommunist authority, a secular authority prime, has a positive effect on promoting prosocial behaviors. These results provided a feasible yet novel way to reveal the mechanism of the relationship between secular authorities and prosociality in China.

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