Haasova Simona, Czellar Sandor, Rahmani Leïla, Morgan Natalie
Department of Marketing, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Front Psychol. 2020 Sep 23;11:2215. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.02215. eCollection 2020.
Most recent epidemics have originated in complex human-nature interactions and yet, our knowledge is very limited regarding the psychological aspects of human-nature relationships that underlie individual human responses in times of pandemic crises. We propose that the concept of connectedness with nature and associated individual difference measures offer a relevant and useful lens to inform us about how humans think, feel and behave in such critical times. Our two-wave study, conducted with 486 United States residents at the end of March 2020 (wave 1) and 533 United States residents at the beginning of May 2020 (wave 2), focuses on the 2020 coronavirus situation. It maps individual responses to the current pandemic in terms of mental representations, behavioral tendencies and perceived impact, and explores the relationships of these constructs to individual levels of connectedness with nature. As this research employs an exploratory methodology, our results provide an account of potential relationships rather than their validation and thus represent an encouraging steppingstone for research on human behavior in the time of a global pandemic. We identify a series of research propositions and questions for systematic future inquiry.
最近的疫情都源于复杂的人与自然的相互作用,然而,对于在大流行危机时期构成个体人类反应基础的人与自然关系的心理层面,我们的了解非常有限。我们认为,与自然的联系概念以及相关的个体差异测量方法,为我们了解人类在这些关键时刻的思维、感受和行为方式提供了一个相关且有用的视角。我们的两波研究于2020年3月底(第1波)对486名美国居民进行,于2020年5月初(第2波)对533名美国居民进行,重点关注2020年的冠状病毒情况。它从心理表征、行为倾向和感知影响等方面描绘了个体对当前疫情的反应,并探讨了这些构念与个体与自然联系水平之间的关系。由于本研究采用探索性方法,我们的结果阐述了潜在的关系,而非对其进行验证,因此为全球大流行时期人类行为的研究提供了一个令人鼓舞的垫脚石。我们确定了一系列研究命题和问题,以供未来进行系统探究。