University of Michigan, USA.
J Health Psychol. 2022 Oct;27(12):2847-2859. doi: 10.1177/13591053211067100. Epub 2022 Jan 6.
The current study examines predictors of social distancing behavior across populations (students and community members) and across time in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, focusing on two factors commonly associated with risk perception and prevention: knowledge and affect. Results showed that, despite similar levels of social distancing, student distancing was predicted only by feelings of threat about COVID-19, whereas community distancing was predicted by both feeling informed and threatened. Examining longitudinal effects, which were limited to students only, students became more informed about COVID-19 over time, and increases in being informed (but not feeling threatened) predicted more distancing.
本研究考察了 COVID-19 大流行早期,在不同人群(学生和社区成员)和不同时间内,与社会隔离行为相关的预测因素,重点关注与风险认知和预防相关的两个常见因素:知识和情感。结果表明,尽管社会隔离程度相似,但学生的社会隔离仅由对 COVID-19 的威胁感预测,而社区的社会隔离则由知情感和威胁感共同预测。在仅对学生进行的纵向效应分析中,随着时间的推移,学生对 COVID-19 的了解越来越多,而知情感的增加(而非威胁感)预示着更多的隔离。