Stock Michelle L, Gibbons Frederick X, Beekman Janine B, Gerrard Meg
Department of Psychology, The George Washington University.
Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2015 Jul;109(1):35-52. doi: 10.1037/a0039277.
Three studies (N = 545) investigated the effects of social comparison on the "absent-exempt" (AE) heuristic (feeling exempt from future risk). Study 1 examined how comparison with an infected peer (comparison target) who was similar or nonsimilar in terms of sexual risk (number of partners, lack of condom use), influenced willingness and intentions to engage in sex without a condom, and conditional perceived vulnerability to an STD. Participants generally reported lower willingness and higher conditional vulnerability if they compared with a similar-risk level target. However, high-risk students who compared with a low-risk target engaged in what appeared to be AE thinking, reporting the highest willingness and lowest conditional vulnerability. Intentions to have sex without a condom were not influenced. Study 2 included a direct measure of AE thinking and compared the impact of a low-risk comparison target with a Public Service Announcement (PSA) stating that negative outcomes (STDs) can happen even to low-risk targets. Among high-risk participants, comparing with the low-risk target increased AE thinking. The effects in Studies 1 and 2 were strongest among participants high in tendencies to socially compare. Study 3 explored whether AE thinking could be decreased by encouraging more reasoned processing. Results indicated that asking participants to think about the illogicality of AE thinking reduces AE endorsement and increases STD testing intentions. Findings suggest that comparison-based information can have a stronger influence on health cognitions than analytic-based information (e.g., most PSAs). Implications for dual-processing models of decision-making and their applicability to health messages are discussed.
三项研究(N = 545)调查了社会比较对“缺席-豁免”(AE)启发式思维(感觉未来无风险)的影响。研究1考察了与在性风险(性伴侣数量、不使用避孕套)方面相似或不相似的受感染同伴(比较对象)进行比较,如何影响无避孕套性行为的意愿和意图,以及对性传播感染的条件性易感性。如果参与者与风险水平相似的对象进行比较,他们通常报告较低的意愿和较高的条件性易感性。然而,与低风险对象进行比较的高风险学生表现出AE思维,报告了最高的意愿和最低的条件性易感性。无避孕套性行为的意图未受影响。研究2纳入了对AE思维的直接测量,并将低风险比较对象的影响与一则公共服务公告(PSA)进行比较,该公告称即使是低风险对象也可能出现负面结果(性传播感染)。在高风险参与者中,与低风险对象进行比较增加了AE思维。研究1和研究2的效应在社会比较倾向较高的参与者中最为明显。研究3探讨了通过鼓励更理性的思考过程是否可以减少AE思维。结果表明,要求参与者思考AE思维的不合逻辑性会降低对AE的认同,并增加性传播感染检测的意愿。研究结果表明,基于比较的信息对健康认知的影响可能比基于分析的信息(如大多数PSA)更强。文中讨论了这些结果对决策双加工模型及其在健康信息中的适用性的启示。