新西兰的 COVID-19:参与对态度和主观规范的调节作用

COVID Pub Date : 2024-01-11 DOI:10.3390/covid4010007
Geoff Kaine, Vic Wright
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引用次数: 0

摘要

解释或预测行为意向的流行理论以人们的态度和主观规范为基础。这些理论的应用基于这样一个假设(通常是隐含的),即人们认为某个主题(例如,防止 COVID-19 的传播)足够重要,以至于他们会对此形成稳定的态度和主观规范。由于这一假设很少对所有人都成立,因此态度和主观规范在决定行为意向方面的影响会因主题的重要性而改变。换句话说,重要性对意向、态度和主观规范之间的关系具有调节作用。我们假设,随着重要性的降低,态度对意向的影响会减小,而主观规范的影响会增大。这对于鼓励人们采取与 COVID-19 相关的预防行为具有重要意义,因为旨在改变态度的宣传策略与旨在改变主观规范的宣传策略有明显不同。我们通过分析三项不同的大规模调查来验证这一假设,这些调查涉及人们对 COVID-19 在新西兰传播的意图、参与、态度和主观规范。结果支持了我们的假设,并强调了区分行为意图的形成主要取决于态度和主要取决于主观规范的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
COVID-19 in New Zealand: The Moderating Effect of Involvement on the Roles of Attitudes and Subjective Norms
Popular theories that explain or predict behavioural intentions are based on people’s attitudes and subjective norms. Their application is based on the (often implicit) assumption that people regard a subject (e.g., preventing the spread of COVID-19) as sufficiently important for them to formulate stable attitudes and subjective norms about it. As this assumption rarely holds for all people, the influence of attitudes and subjective norms in determining behavioural intentions changes depending on the importance of the subject. In other words, importance has a moderating effect on the relationship between intentions, attitudes, and subjective norms. We hypothesise that, as importance declines, the influence on intentions of attitudes decreases and the influence of subjective norms increases. This has important implications for efforts to encourage the adoption of preventative behaviours in relation to COVID-19 because promotional strategies designed to modify attitudes differ markedly from those designed to modify subjective norms. We test this hypothesis by analysing three different large-scale surveys about people’s intentions, involvement, attitudes, and subjective norms regarding the spread of COVID-19 in New Zealand. The results support our hypothesis and highlight the importance of distinguishing between when the formation of behavioural intentions depends mainly on attitudes and when it depends mainly on subjective norms.
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