Lost in Translation: Narrative Salience of Fear > Hope in Prevention of COVID-19

Holly L. Peterson, Chad Zanocco, Aaron Smith-Walter
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Using short, policy-image-like narratives, we explore the relationship between narrative agreement and narrative impacts in the case of COVID-19 in the US. Building upon previous research which identified attention narratives focusing on problems “stories of fear” and those focusing on solutions “stories of hope,” we use a narrative survey experiment of the general public (n=1000) to test the salience of problem and solution narratives and if they impact agreement with Center for Disease Control (CDC) prevention guidelines. Our findings are 1) fear story agreement is partisan but hope story agreement is not 2) fear story is the more salient of the two, 3) narrative agreement for both fear and hope were related to CDC safety guideline agreement, but were partisan, and 4) exposure to neither narrative impacted likelihood to agree with the guidelines as compared to a control group. Our findings are consistent with previous work indicating a Democratic party preference for stories of fear, where Democrats were more likely to support policy action. While we find that agreement with our narratives and guidelines is related, neither narrative treatment successfully altered support for CDC guidelines, suggesting a potential limit for the influence of narratives to either change or reorder existing preferences in highly salient and partisan issue areas like COVID-19 and suggesting a need for more research into the dynamics of narrative attention.
迷失在翻译中:恐惧的叙事突出> COVID-19预防的希望
我们使用简短的、类似政策图像的叙事,探讨了美国COVID-19案例中叙事一致性与叙事影响之间的关系。在之前的研究中,我们确定了关注问题的叙事是“恐惧的故事”,关注解决方案的叙事是“希望的故事”。在此基础上,我们对普通公众进行了一项叙事调查实验(n=1000),以测试问题叙事和解决方案叙事的显著性,以及它们是否影响了疾病控制中心(CDC)预防指南的一致性。我们的研究结果是:1)恐惧故事的一致性是党派性的,但希望故事的一致性不是;2)恐惧故事在两者中更为突出;3)恐惧和希望的叙事一致性与CDC安全指南的一致性有关,但是党派性的;4)与对照组相比,暴露于两种叙事都不影响同意指南的可能性。我们的发现与之前的研究一致,即民主党人更喜欢恐惧的故事,民主党人更有可能支持政策行动。虽然我们发现与我们的叙述和指南的一致性是相关的,但叙述治疗都没有成功改变对CDC指南的支持,这表明叙述的影响可能会受到限制,无法改变或重新排序在COVID-19等高度突出和党派问题领域的现有偏好,并表明需要对叙述注意力的动态进行更多研究。
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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