已发表论文

自我-他人重叠如何塑造青少年的网络利他主义:共情和道德认同的作用

 

Authors Dong Z, Wang R, Zhao Z, Xie K, Li A, Luo H, Li L

Received 11 October 2024

Accepted for publication 27 January 2025

Published 17 February 2025 Volume 2025:18 Pages 331—340

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/PRBM.S492811

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Dr Gabriela Topa

Zexu Dong, Ruixin Wang, Zhenyu Zhao, Kunhang Xie, Anan Li, Hongge Luo, Lina Li

School of Psychology and Mental Health, North China University of Science and Technology, Tangshan, Hebei Province, People’s Republic of China

Correspondence: Lina Li, School of Psychology and Mental Health, North China University of Science and Technology, 21 Bohai Avenue, Caofeidian District, Tangshan, Hebei Province, People’s Republic of China, 063210, Tel/Fax +86 0315-8805983, Email lilina3725582@163.com

Purpose: Although adolescent online behavior has become a research hotspot in recent years, most studies focus on the risks in online life, lacking research on positive phenomena online and even more so on the exploration of their internal mechanisms. This study explores the relationship between self-other overlap, empathy, moral identity, and adolescent online altruistic behavior, and discusses whether empathy and moral identity play a serial mediating role between self-other overlap and adolescent online altruistic behavior.
Patients and Methods: This study conducted a questionnaire survey on 392 adolescents. Descriptive analysis and correlation analysis were performed using SPSS 23.0, and model construction and bias-adjusted bootstrap mediation effect testing were conducted using Mplus 8.3.
Results: There were significant positive correlations between self-other overlap, empathy, moral identity and internet altruistic behavior (r=0.168~0.412, all p< 0.01). Self-other overlap can directly predict internet altruistic behavior, and can also indirectly predict internet altruistic behavior through chain mediating effects of empathy and moral identity.
Conclusion: This study has discovered the internal mechanism by which self-other overlap affects online altruistic behavior, demonstrating that empathy and moral identity play a chain mediating role in this process. This finding can guide people to view the impact of network development more dialectically, calling for a focus on how to leverage the positive effects of the internet rather than simply blaming its negative impacts. It also provides new theoretical basis for guiding adolescents on how to use the internet healthily, contributing to the construction of a more harmonious online environment.

Keywords: self-other overlap, internet altruistic behavior, empathy, moral identity, adolescents