从极端到主流:社会规范是如何瓦解的

Leonardo Bursztyn, Georgy Egorov, Stefano Fiorin
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引用次数: 95

摘要

社会规范通常被认为是持久和持久的,有时会在经济增长、经济衰退和政权更迭中幸存下来。然而,在某些情况下,它们可以迅速改变。本文探讨了当新信息变得可用时,例如,通过选举汇总时,沟通中的社会规范的解体。我们建立了公民之间的战略沟通模式,他们可以持有两种相互排斥的观点之一。在我们的模型中,代理相互交流他们的意见,发送方关心接收方的认可。因此,发送者更有可能表达更受欢迎的观点,而接收者对发送者发表流行观点的推断较少。我们用两个实验来检验这些预测。在主要实验中,我们确定了唐纳德·特朗普(Donald Trump)政治人气上升对个人公开表达仇外观点意愿的因果影响。如果实验参与者授权研究人员代表他们向反移民组织捐款,他们将获得额外奖励。与那些期望匿名选择的参与者相比,那些期望他们的决定被测量员观察到的参与者接受这个提议的可能性要小得多。参与者对特朗普受欢迎程度的认知增加(无论是通过实验性变化,还是通过他获胜的“自然实验”),消除了私人行为和公共行为之间的鸿沟。第二个实验使用独裁者游戏来显示,如果一个人所处的社会环境大多数人都持有自己不同意的政治观点,那么参与者对他公开表达自己不同意的政治观点(而不是私下持有这种观点)的评价就会降低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
From Extreme to Mainstream: How Social Norms Unravel
Social norms are typically thought to be persistent and long-lasting, sometimes surviving through growth, recessions, and regime changes. In some cases, however, they can quickly change. This paper examines the unraveling of social norms in communication when new information becomes available, e.g., aggregated through elections. We build a model of strategic communication between citizens who can hold one of two mutually exclusive opinions. In our model, agents communicate their opinions to each other, and senders care about receivers' approval. As a result, senders are more likely to express the more popular opinion, while receivers make less inference about senders who stated the popular view. We test these predictions using two experiments. In the main experiment, we identify the causal effect of Donald Trump's rise in political popularity on individuals' willingness to publicly express xenophobic views. Participants in the experiment are offered a bonus reward if they authorize researchers to make a donation to an anti-immigration organization on their behalf. Participants who expect their decision to be observed by the surveyor are significantly less likely to accept the offer than those expecting an anonymous choice. Increases in participants' perceptions of Trump's popularity (either through experimental variation or through the “natural experiment” of his victory) eliminate the wedge between private and public behavior. A second experiment uses dictator games to show that participants judge a person less negatively for publicly expressing (but not for privately holding) a political view they disagree with if that person's social environment is one where the majority of people holds that view.
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