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我戴着口罩,但他们戴了吗?:对 COVID-19 健康行为中自我-他人差异的认知。

I'm wearing a mask, but are they?: Perceptions of self-other differences in COVID-19 health behaviors.

机构信息

Brain, Behavior, and Quantitative Sciences Program, Psychology Department, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, United States of America.

Cofrin Logan Center for Addiction Research and Treatment, Lawrence, Kansas, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2022 Jun 6;17(6):e0269625. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0269625. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

As information about COVID-19 safety behavior changed, people had to judge how likely others were to protect themselves through mask-wearing and vaccination seeking. In a large, campus-wide survey, we assessed whether University of Kansas students viewed others' protective behaviors as different from their own, how much students assumed others shared their beliefs and behaviors, and which individual differences were associated with those estimations. Participants in our survey (N = 1, 704; 81.04% white, 64.08% female) estimated how likely they and others were to have worn masks on the University of Kansas campus, have worn masks off-campus, and to seek a vaccine. They also completed measures of political preference, numeracy, and preferences for risk in various contexts. We found that participants estimated that others were less likely to engage in health safety behaviors than themselves, but that their estimations of others were widely shared. While, in general, participants saw themselves as more unique in terms of practicing COVID-19 preventative behaviors, more liberal participants saw themselves as more unique, while those that were more conservative saw their own behavior as more similar to others. At least for masking, this uniqueness was false-estimates of others' health behavior were lower than their actual rates. Understanding this relationship could allow for more accurate norm-setting and normalization of mask-wearing and vaccination.

摘要

随着有关 COVID-19 安全行为的信息不断变化,人们不得不判断其他人通过戴口罩和寻求接种疫苗来保护自己的可能性有多大。在一项大规模的校园范围内的调查中,我们评估了堪萨斯大学的学生是否认为他人的保护行为与自己的不同,学生们对他人的信仰和行为的假设程度,以及哪些个体差异与这些估计有关。我们调查的参与者(N=1704;81.04%为白人,64.08%为女性)估计他们自己和他人在堪萨斯大学校园里戴口罩、在校外戴口罩以及寻求疫苗的可能性。他们还完成了关于政治偏好、计算能力和各种情况下对风险的偏好的测量。我们发现,参与者估计其他人不太可能采取健康安全行为,但他们对他人的估计得到了广泛的认同。虽然总的来说,参与者认为自己在实践 COVID-19 预防行为方面更具独特性,但更自由派的参与者认为自己更独特,而更保守的参与者则认为自己的行为与他人更相似。至少在戴口罩方面,这种独特性是错误的——对他人健康行为的估计低于实际水平。了解这种关系可以更准确地设定规范并使戴口罩和接种疫苗正常化。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ce58/9170093/ea9d87f944b4/pone.0269625.g001.jpg

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