Immoral, infectious, or both? How disgust sensitivity predicts judgments of violations against COVID‐19 mitigation actions

IF 4.8 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Social and Personality Psychology Compass Pub Date : 2023-10-25 DOI:10.1111/spc3.12914
Sascha Schwarz, Lisa Klümper, Markus Thomas Jansen, Maria Agthe
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Abstract

Abstract Violations against mitigation actions to prevent the spreading of the SARS‐CoV‐2 virus causing COVID‐19, such as not wearing a mask or not practicing social distancing, were seen as immoral and could also increase the likelihood of spreading the virus. In two studies ( N 1 = 318, N 2 = 293), we found that moral and pathogen disgust sensitivity differentially predicted perceptions of such COVID‐19 violations against mitigation actions, framed as a moral, pathogen, or on a good‐bad dimension, albeit in a less specific way than initially hypothesized (e.g., regarding the pathogenic framed violations, not only pathogen but also moral disgust was associated with higher perceptions of infectiousness). These results suggest that individual differences, especially in pathogen disgust (and, more inconsistently, moral disgust), are important when evaluating violations against mitigation actions. Further research on the role of moral disgust is needed.
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不道德,有传染性,还是两者兼而有之?厌恶敏感性如何预测违反COVID - 19缓解措施的判断
违反缓解措施以防止SARS - CoV - 2病毒引起COVID - 19的传播,例如不戴口罩或不保持社交距离,被视为不道德,也可能增加病毒传播的可能性。在两项研究中(N 1 = 318, N 2 = 293),我们发现道德和病原体厌恶敏感性差异预测了对此类COVID - 19违反缓解行动的看法,框架为道德,病原体或好-坏维度,尽管以比最初假设的更不具体的方式(例如,关于致病性框架违规,不仅病原体而且道德厌恶与更高的传染性感知相关)。这些结果表明,个体差异,特别是在病原体厌恶(以及更不一致的道德厌恶)方面,在评估违反缓解行动时很重要。道德厌恶的作用有待进一步研究。
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来源期刊
Social and Personality Psychology Compass
Social and Personality Psychology Compass Psychology-Social Psychology
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
2.20%
发文量
59
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