University of Osnabrueck, Germany.
Br J Soc Psychol. 2021 Jul;60(3):924-946. doi: 10.1111/bjso.12439. Epub 2021 Jan 4.
During the coronavirus pandemic, governments across the globe ordered physical-distancing and hygiene restrictions to slow down the spread of COVID-19. The present work was conducted during the peak of restrictions in Germany (April/May 2020). In a convenient (N = 218) and representative sample (N = 715), we examined people's motivations to comply with these restrictions during the lockdown: Were they motivated by personal self-protection, or rather by solidarity with people in risk groups? Specifically, we investigated predictors of personal self-protection (compliance to protect the self against infection) and group-protection behaviours (compliance for reasons of solidarity in protecting people in risk groups). Results indicate that self- and group-protection result from different psychological processes: Whereas personal self-protection seems to be a form of coping with personal anxieties (epistemic and existential needs, personal threat), group protection is an intergroup phenomenon that is enabled by identification with a collective goal (common identity), the perception that society is capable of dealing with the virus (group efficacy), and concern for people in risk groups. We discuss potential implications for behavioural change in pandemics.
在冠状病毒大流行期间,全球各国政府都下令实施保持社交距离和卫生限制措施,以减缓 COVID-19 的传播。本研究是在德国限制措施达到高峰时进行的(2020 年 4 月/5 月)。在一项方便(N=218)且具有代表性的样本(N=715)中,我们研究了人们在封锁期间遵守这些限制的动机:他们是出于个人自我保护的动机,还是出于对风险群体中人们的团结?具体来说,我们调查了个人自我保护(遵守规定以保护自己免受感染)和群体保护行为(出于保护风险群体中人们的团结而遵守规定)的预测因素。结果表明,自我保护和群体保护源自不同的心理过程:虽然个人自我保护似乎是应对个人焦虑(认知和生存需要、个人威胁)的一种方式,但群体保护是一种群体现象,它是通过认同集体目标(共同身份)、感知社会有能力应对病毒(群体效能)以及对风险群体中的人表示关注而实现的。我们讨论了这对大流行期间行为改变的潜在影响。