Narratives on COVID-19 and Policy Opinions: A Survey Experiment

Armenak Antinyan, T. Bassetti, L. Corazzini, Filippo Pavesi
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Narratives impact people’s opinions on relevant policy issues, and their political context may influence these effects. Indeed, some specific contexts may be more easily swayed by certain stories that provide explanations for current social and economic phenomena. We explore this issue by considering the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic as a natural experiment that creates the ideal conditions for existing narratives to gain momentum and spread. In particular, we run a survey experiment in the US by exposing subjects to two media-based popular explanations on the causes of the COVID- 19 pandemic. The Lab narrative attributes the upstart of the pandemic to human error and scientific misconduct in a laboratory in China, while the Nature narrative describes the genetic and biological causes of the virus. We find evidence that subjects’ beliefs on the origins of the disease are influenced by the narrative they are presented with. Moreover, the Lab narrative leads subjects living in Republican leaning states to express less favorable opinions about trade openness and the relevance of climate change relative to those living in Democratic leaning states. Thus, our findings provide support for the idea that recalling stories that are part of larger narratives can lead to divergence of opinions on crucial issues leading to an increase in policy polarization. Finally, we explore the underlying features of social contexts associated with US states’ political orientation, that moderate the impact of narratives on policy opinions.
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COVID-19叙事与政策意见:一项调查实验
叙事影响人们对相关政策问题的看法,而他们的政治背景可能会影响这些影响。事实上,某些特定的背景可能更容易受到某些故事的影响,这些故事为当前的社会和经济现象提供了解释。我们通过将正在进行的COVID-19大流行视为一种自然实验来探讨这一问题,该实验为现有叙述获得动力和传播创造了理想条件。特别是,我们在美国进行了一项调查实验,让受试者接触到两种基于媒体的关于COVID- 19大流行原因的流行解释。实验室的叙述将大流行的爆发归咎于中国实验室的人为错误和科学不端行为,而《自然》的叙述则描述了病毒的遗传和生物学原因。我们发现证据表明,受试者对疾病起源的信念受到他们所呈现的叙述的影响。此外,与生活在民主党倾向州的人相比,实验室的叙述导致生活在共和党倾向州的受试者对贸易开放和气候变化的相关性表达不那么有利的看法。因此,我们的研究结果为以下观点提供了支持:回忆作为更大叙事一部分的故事可能导致在关键问题上的意见分歧,从而导致政策两极分化的加剧。最后,我们探讨了与美国各州政治取向相关的社会背景的潜在特征,这些特征缓和了叙事对政策观点的影响。
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