Ambiguous COVID-19 Messaging Increases Unsafe Socializing Intentions

Vincent Hopkins, Mark Pickup, Scott Matthews
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Abstract

Before and during the vaccine roll out, governments reported surging COVID-19 cases due to unsafe socializing among younger individuals. Officials continue to search for effective ways to encourage safe socializing behaviour within this demographic. However, a key challenge is that public health advice is necessarily nuanced and complex, which can create ambiguity. Appropriate behaviour depends on specific circumstances and public messaging cannot detail every situation. When people confront ambiguity in expert guidance, they may engage in motivated reasoning—that is, people’s underlying motivations may influence how they process information and make decisions. In a pre-registered experiment, we look at the effect of ambiguous public health messaging on people’s inferences regarding the behaviours the government expects them to avoid and intentions to engage in unsafe socializing. We find no evidence of an effect on inferences—that is, people who receive an ambiguous message about COVID-19 make inferences about correct behaviour that are similar to the inferences of those who receive no message. However, we find ambiguous messaging increases unsafe socializing intentions, especially among people aged 18-39 who socialized before the pandemic. Our findings underscore the need for unambiguous communications during public health crises.
模棱两可的COVID-19信息增加了不安全的社交意图
在疫苗推出之前和期间,各国政府报告说,由于年轻人之间不安全的社交,COVID-19病例激增。官员们继续寻找有效的方法来鼓励这一人群的安全社交行为。然而,一个关键的挑战是,公共卫生建议必然是微妙和复杂的,这可能造成歧义。适当的行为取决于具体情况,公开信息不能详细说明每一种情况。当人们面对专家指导的模糊性时,他们可能会进行动机推理——也就是说,人们的潜在动机可能会影响他们处理信息和做出决策的方式。在一项预先注册的实验中,我们研究了模棱两可的公共卫生信息对人们对政府希望他们避免的行为和参与不安全社交的意图的推断的影响。我们没有发现任何证据表明对推论有影响,也就是说,收到关于COVID-19的模糊信息的人对正确行为的推论与没有收到信息的人的推论相似。然而,我们发现,模棱两可的信息会增加不安全的社交意图,特别是在大流行前进行社交的18-39岁人群中。我们的发现强调了在公共卫生危机期间进行明确沟通的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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