‘Of pathogens and party lines: Social conservatism positively associates with COVID-19 precautions among U.S. Democrats but not Republicans’

Here’s a summary of a June 29, 2021 study: Social liberals tend to be less pathogen-avoidant than social conservatives, a pattern consistent with a model wherein ideological differences stem from differences in threat reactivity. Here we investigate if and how individual responses to a shared threat reflect those patterns of ideological difference. In seeming contradiction to the general association between social conservatism and pathogen avoidance, the more socially conservative political party in the United States has more consistently downplayed the dangers of COVID-19 during the ongoing pandemic. This puzzle offers an opportunity to examine the contributions of multiple factors to disease avoidance. We investigated the relationship between social conservatism and COVID-19 precautionary behavior in light of the partisan landscape of the United States. We explored whether consumption of, and attitudes toward, different sources of information, as well as differential evaluation of various threats caused by the pandemic—such as direct health costs versus indirect harms to the economy and individual liberties—shape partisan differences in responses to the pandemic in ways that overwhelm the contributions of social conservatism. In two pre-registered studies, socially conservative attitudes correlate with self-reported COVID-19 prophylactic behaviors, but only among Democrats. Reflecting larger societal divisions, among Republicans and Independents, the absence of a positive relationship between social conservatism and COVID-19 precautions appears driven by lower trust in scientists, lower trust in liberal and moderate sources, lesser consumption of liberal news media, and greater economic conservatism.

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Risk perception, illusory superiority, and personal responsibility during COVID-19: An experimental study of attitudes to staying home

Here are some highlights from this new academic paper:

* there are prominent examples where communications regarding desired behaviour during the COVID-19 pandemic largely fall into one of two classes: imperative messaging, and communication that invites personal responsibility and reasoning from the public. The communications that invoke personal responsibility are often part of a strategy to create or maintain civic engagement, whereas the imperative simplifies the task at hand, a strategy that appears to follow the (often criticised) deficit model. The deficit model homogenises the audience and communicates information that serves to fill a deficit in knowledge (Meyer, 2016). Such an approach is often not beneficial for civic engagement, but when risks are high and without ambiguity, instrumental discourse can work well (Renn, 2008). In contrast, communication that encourages civic engagement (or community engagement) can enhance the effectiveness of containment measures in public health emergencies (Renn, 2008, 2020), and increase the likelihood of cooperation by the public (Head, 2011).

* People have a general tendency to view their own actions more favourably, which is called self-serving bias (Mezulis et al., 2004), and to view themselves as better than average, illusory superiority (Zell et al., 2020). This could also be the case for pandemic response behaviour, such that people will falsely believe their physical distancing behaviour is more rigorous than that of others. This is potentially harmful because if people believe that they have acted morally (because they think they are comparatively rigorously physical distancing), they will be more likely to behave immorally later (Blanken et al., 2015), which could be a reason for suboptimal compliance. This counterintuitive behaviour pattern is called moral licensing.

* The imperative framing was more effective than the framing invoking personal responsibility at encouraging stringent attitudes to staying home in general, and particularly in low and minimal-risk scenarios.

* Understanding loophole reasoning is critical for COVID-19 because even a low number of people finding loopholes for themselves can have devastating effects (Donnarumma & Pezzulo, 2020). Illusory superiority may lead to moral licensing, and thus a self-loophole. That is, people may not a priori believe they are more justified in going out, but if they believe they have been morally ‘good’ by self-isolating rigorously, then they may be more likely to behave immorally and transgress (through moral licensing).

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Luke and Paul play cricket (12-22-21)

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A Safe Place For You In Queensland

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Why Has Bad Behavior Skyrocketed? (12-12-21)

00:00 The Game: A Portrait of Scott Morrison, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=142462
07:00 Elliott Blatt joins
20:00 The quality of life has gone downhill in San Francisco, Los Angeles
30:00 Elliott is bullish about America
48:00 Trolling and its downsides
50:00 Building friendships while minimizing social obligations
1:00:00 Dooovid joins
1:23:00 Dooovid quits dope
1:25:00 Elliott on Mushrooms
1:35:00 Christian Science, Seventh-Day Adventism
1:39:00 Not many rappers in Sydney
1:41:00 Dooovid’s rap management

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