Responses to political partisans are shaped by a COVID-19-sensitive disease avoidance psychology: A longitudinal investigation of functional flexibility.

IF 12.3 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
American Psychologist Pub Date : 2025-02-01 Epub Date: 2024-03-28 DOI:10.1037/amp0001318
Ahra Ko, Steven L Neuberg, Cari M Pick, Michael E W Varnum, D Vaughn Becker
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

How do natural changes in disease avoidance motivation shape thoughts about and behaviors toward ingroup and outgroup members? During the COVID-19 pandemic, political party affiliation has been a strong predictor in the United States of COVID-19-related opinions, attitudes, and behaviors. Using a six-wave longitudinal panel survey of representative Americans (on Prolific, N = 1,124, from April 2020 to February 2021), we explored how naturally occurring changes across time in both risks of COVID-19 infection and people's disease avoidance motivation shaped thoughts about and behaviors toward Republicans and Democrats (e.g., perceived infection threat, feelings of disgust, desires to avoid). We found a significant effect of dispositional level of motivation, over and above powerful effects of in-party favoritism/out-party derogation: Participants with a dispositionally stronger motivation to avoid disease showed greater infection management responses, especially toward Republicans; this held even for Republican participants. More importantly, we also found a significant interactive effect of within-person variability and ecological infection risk: Participants who sensitively upregulated their motivation during the rapid spread of COVID-19 perceived greater infection threat by Republicans and felt less disgust toward and desire to avoid Democrats. This finding, too, held for Republican participants. These results provide evidence of functionally flexible within-person psychological disease avoidance-a theoretically important process long presumed and now demonstrated-and suggest another mechanism contributing to U.S. political polarization. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

对政治党徒的反应受 COVID-19 敏感性疾病回避心理的影响:功能灵活性纵向调查
疾病回避动机的自然变化如何影响对内群和外群成员的想法和行为?在 COVID-19 大流行期间,在美国,政党归属是 COVID-19 相关观点、态度和行为的有力预测因素。通过对具有代表性的美国人进行六波纵向小组调查(在 Prolific 上进行,N = 1,124 ,时间为 2020 年 4 月至 2021 年 2 月),我们探讨了 COVID-19 感染风险和人们的疾病回避动机在不同时期的自然变化如何影响人们对共和党人和民主党人的看法和行为(如感知感染威胁、厌恶感、回避欲望)。我们发现,除了党内偏袒/党外贬损的强大影响外,倾向性动机水平也有重大影响:具有更强避病动机的参与者表现出更强的感染管理反应,尤其是对共和党人;即使是共和党参与者也是如此。更重要的是,我们还发现人内变异与生态感染风险之间存在显著的互动效应:在 COVID-19 快速传播期间,那些敏感性较高的参与者认为共和党人的感染威胁更大,而对民主党人的厌恶感和回避欲望较低。这一结果也适用于共和党参与者。这些结果提供了功能灵活的人际心理疾病回避的证据--这一理论上的重要过程早已被推定,现在得到了证实--并提出了导致美国政治两极分化的另一种机制。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
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来源期刊
American Psychologist
American Psychologist PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
18.50
自引率
1.20%
发文量
145
期刊介绍: Established in 1946, American Psychologist® is the flagship peer-reviewed scholarly journal of the American Psychological Association. It publishes high-impact papers of broad interest, including empirical reports, meta-analyses, and scholarly reviews, covering psychological science, practice, education, and policy. Articles often address issues of national and international significance within the field of psychology and its relationship to society. Published in an accessible style, contributions in American Psychologist are designed to be understood by both psychologists and the general public.
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