Institute of Space and Earth Information Science, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong, China.
Department of Geography and Resource Management, Institute of Space and Earth Information Science, and Institute of Future Cities, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong, China.
Soc Sci Med. 2024 Oct;358:117247. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117247. Epub 2024 Aug 16.
Individual-level georeferenced data have been widely used in COVID-19 control measures around the world. Recent research observed that there is a trade-off relationship between people's privacy concerns and their acceptance of these control measures. However, whether this trade-off relationship exists across different cultural contexts is still unaddressed. Using data we collected via an international survey (n = 4260) and network analysis, our study found a substantial trade-off inter-relationship among people's privacy concerns, perceived social benefits, and acceptance across different control measures and study areas. People's privacy concerns in culturally tight societies (e.g., Japan) have the smallest negative impacts on their acceptance of pandemic control measures. The results also identify people's key views of specific control measures that can influence their views of other control measures. The impacts of these key views are heightened among participants with a conservative political view, high levels of perceived social tightness, and vertical individualism. Our results indicate that cultural factors are a key mechanism that mediate people's privacy concerns and their acceptance of pandemic control measures. These close inter-relationships lead to a double-edged sword effect: the increased positive impacts of people's acceptance and perceived social benefits also lead to increased negative impacts of privacy concerns in different combinations of control strategies. The findings highlight the importance of cultural factors as key determinants that affect people's acceptance or rejection of specific pandemic control measures.
个体层面的地理位置数据在全球范围内的 COVID-19 防控措施中得到了广泛应用。最近的研究观察到,人们对隐私的担忧与其对这些控制措施的接受程度之间存在权衡关系。然而,这种权衡关系在不同的文化背景下是否存在仍未得到解决。本研究使用通过国际调查(n=4260)和网络分析收集的数据,发现人们对隐私的担忧、感知的社会收益以及对不同控制措施和研究领域的接受程度之间存在实质性的权衡关系。在文化紧密的社会(例如日本)中,人们对隐私的担忧对其对大流行控制措施的接受程度的负面影响最小。研究结果还确定了人们对特定控制措施的关键看法,这些看法可能会影响他们对其他控制措施的看法。在政治观点保守、感知社会紧密程度高和垂直个人主义程度高的参与者中,这些关键观点的影响更为明显。研究结果表明,文化因素是调节人们对大流行病控制措施的隐私担忧和接受程度的关键机制。这些密切的相互关系导致了双刃剑效应:人们接受和感知的社会收益的增加也会导致在不同的控制策略组合中隐私担忧的负面影响增加。这些发现强调了文化因素作为影响人们对特定大流行病控制措施的接受或拒绝的关键决定因素的重要性。