Threat of COVID-19 pandemic, conditional cooperation and health-protective behaviour: Evidence from a global survey

IF 2.7 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL
Harris Hyun-soo Kim
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Abstract

Why do some people ‘cooperate’ by adhering to anti-pandemic government guidelines and mandates, while others opt to behave in more selfish ways? This study addresses this question by focusing on the concept of ‘conditional cooperation’. Data were drawn from the Global Behaviors and Perceptions in the COVID-19 Pandemic, a large online survey (N = 98,310) consisting of respondents from 63 countries fielded during the weeks of March and April of 2020. Two-level mixed effects models were fitted. Adjusting for controls, people's compliance behaviours were significantly related to the mechanism of conditional cooperation. More specifically, those who perceived others to be more cooperative were more likely to engage in social distancing behaviour during the COVID-19 pandemic. In contrast, subjective assessment of the infection rate was negatively associated with it. In addition, at the macro (country) level, physical mobility index negatively predicted health-protective or disease-avoidant behaviour, a relationship that fluctuated partly as a function of the level of perceived infection. A major implication of this study is that cross-nationally individual decisions to contribute to the provision of public good during a global public health crisis hinge critically on both subjective and objective measures of others' willingness to cooperate.

Abstract Image

COVID-19 大流行的威胁、有条件的合作和健康保护行为:来自全球调查的证据
为什么有些人会 "合作",遵守抗击流行病的政府指导方针和任务,而另一些人则选择更自私的行为方式?本研究通过关注 "有条件的合作 "这一概念来探讨这一问题。数据来自 COVID-19 大流行中的全球行为和看法,这是一项大型在线调查(N = 98,310 人),由来自 63 个国家的受访者在 2020 年 3 月和 4 月的几周内完成。调查采用了两级混合效应模型。对控制因素进行调整后发现,人们的遵从行为与有条件合作机制有显著关系。更具体地说,在 COVID-19 大流行期间,那些认为他人更合作的人更有可能采取社会疏远行为。相反,对感染率的主观评估则与之呈负相关。此外,在宏观(国家)层面上,身体流动性指数对保护健康或避免疾病的行为有负向预测作用,这种关系部分随感知感染率的高低而波动。本研究的一个重要意义在于,在全球公共卫生危机期间,个人是否决定为提供公益服务做出贡献,关键取决于对他人合作意愿的主观和客观衡量。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
7.40%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: The Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology publishes papers regarding social behaviour in relation to community problems and strengths. The journal is international in scope, reflecting the common concerns of scholars and community practitioners in Europe and worldwide.
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