Perceptions of the Targets and Sources of COVID-19 Threat are Structured by Group Memberships and Responses are Influenced by Identification with Humankind

IF 2.7 4区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Svenja B Frenzel, N. Junker, L. Avanzi, Valerie A Erkens, S. Haslam, C. Haslam, J. Häusser, D. Knorr, Ines Meyer, A. Mojzisch, Lucas Monzani, S. Reicher, Sebastian C. Schuh, Niklas K. Steffens, L. V. van Zyl, R. van Dick
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate which social groups are perceived as a threat target and which are perceived as a threat source during the COVID-19 outbreak. In a German sample (N = 1454) we examined perceptions of social groups ranging from those that are psychologically close and smaller (family, friends, neighbors) to those that are more distal and larger (people living in Germany, humankind). We hypothesized that psychologically closer groups would be perceived as less affected by COVID-19 as well as less threatening than more psychologically distal groups. Based on social identity theorizing, we also hypothesized that stronger identification with humankind would change these patterns. Furthermore, we explored how these threat perceptions relate to adherence to COVID-19 health guidelines. In line with our hypotheses, latent random-slope modelling revealed that psychologically distal and larger groups were perceived as more affected by COVID-19 and as more threatening than psychologically closer and smaller groups. Including identification with humankind as a predictor into the threat target model resulted in a steeper increase in threat target perception patterns, whereas identification with humankind did not predict differences in threat source perceptions. Additionally, an increase in threat source perceptions across social groups was associated with more adherence to health guidelines, whereas an increase in threat target perceptions was not. We fully replicated these findings in a subgroup from the original sample (N = 989) four weeks later. We argue that societal recovery from this and other crises will be supported by an inclusive approach informed by a sense of our common identity as human beings.
新冠肺炎威胁的目标和来源的感知是由群体成员构成的,而反应是由对人类的认同所影响的
本研究的目的是调查在COVID-19爆发期间哪些社会群体被视为威胁目标,哪些被视为威胁来源。在一个德国样本(N = 1454)中,我们研究了人们对社会群体的看法,从心理上亲密的、较小的群体(家庭、朋友、邻居)到更遥远的、更大的群体(生活在德国的人,人类)。我们假设,心理上较近的群体会被认为受COVID-19的影响较小,而且比心理上较远的群体更具威胁性。基于社会认同理论,我们还假设对人类更强的认同会改变这些模式。此外,我们探讨了这些威胁感知与遵守COVID-19健康指南的关系。根据我们的假设,潜在随机斜率模型显示,心理上较远和较大的群体被认为比心理上较近和较小的群体受COVID-19的影响更大,更具威胁性。将对人类的认同作为威胁目标模型的预测因素,导致威胁目标感知模式的急剧增加,而对人类的认同并不能预测威胁来源感知的差异。此外,社会群体中对威胁来源认知的增加与更多地遵守健康指南有关,而对威胁目标认知的增加与此无关。四周后,我们在原始样本(N = 989)的一个亚组中完全重复了这些发现。我们认为,社会从这场危机和其他危机中复苏,将得到一种包容性方法的支持,这种方法基于我们作为人类的共同认同感。
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来源期刊
Psychologica Belgica
Psychologica Belgica PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
5.00%
发文量
22
审稿时长
4 weeks
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