Georgarakis George N
Columbia University.
Sciences Po.
Polit Psychol. 2022 Oct 27. doi: 10.1111/pops.12865.
Existing research has focused extensively on the role of emotions such as anger, fear, and enthusiasm in explaining public opinion, but less is known about the importance of disgust, an innate disease-related emotion. To study the independent and joint effects of disgust and information, I draw on the case of the COVID-19 pandemic. I demonstrate that experimentally induced incidental disgust and exposure to information about how to flatten the curve of the COVID-19 cases have distinctive effects on political, racial, and health attitudes. Independently, exposure to information affects preferences only for restrictive policies to fight the spread of the virus. In contrast, the stand-alone effect of incidental disgust, as well as its joint effect with exposure to information, are responsible for attitude change toward both pandemic-relevant and irrelevant policies, Asian minorities, and prevention measures. Importantly, the study finds that citizens respond symmetrically to disgusting stimuli and information across degrees of political awareness, ideology, partisan affiliation, and trait authoritarianism. The results draw attention to the far-reaching implications of disgust on public opinion under threatening conditions.
现有研究广泛关注了愤怒、恐惧和热情等情绪在解释公众舆论方面的作用,但对于厌恶这种与疾病相关的固有情绪的重要性却知之甚少。为了研究厌恶和信息的独立及联合影响,我以新冠疫情为例。我证明,实验诱导的偶发性厌恶以及接触有关如何 flatten the curve of the COVID - 19 cases(此处可能是“平缓新冠病例曲线”之类的表述,原文表述不太准确)的信息,对政治、种族和健康态度有独特影响。单独来看,接触信息仅影响对限制病毒传播政策的偏好。相比之下,偶发性厌恶的单独影响及其与接触信息的联合影响,导致了对与疫情相关和无关政策、亚裔少数群体以及预防措施的态度变化。重要的是,该研究发现,公民在政治意识、意识形态、党派归属和特质威权主义程度上,对令人厌恶的刺激和信息的反应是对称的。研究结果凸显了在威胁性条件下厌恶对公众舆论的深远影响。