Does COVID-19 threat relate to intergroup attitudes? A test in the U.K.

IF 1.1 Q4 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences Pub Date : 2022-09-15 DOI:10.1037/ebs0000311
Hirotaka Imada, F. Lalot, D. Abrams
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Abstract

Social and evolutionary psychologists propose that humans have acquired an evolutionary mechanism that facilitates pathogen avoidance behavior: the behavioral immune system (BIS). Previous studies have revealed that the BIS yields negative attitudes toward out-group members. Given the clear relevance of pathogen-avoidance psychology to individuals' reactions to the COVID-19 global pandemic, the present research examined whether attitudes toward potentially pathogenic outgroups during the pandemic would reflect the BIS. Using large-scale panel data (N = 1,548) collected in May 2020 in 3 of the U.K.'s devolved nations (England, Scotland, and Wales), we examined whether perceived COVID-19 threat was associated with negative attitudes toward 2 different national out-groups linked to the initial outbreak (Italy and China), as well as the in-group (the U.K.). Failing to support the BIS hypothesis, mini-meta-analyses on results from the 3 nations revealed that COVID-19 threat was only very weakly associated with attitude toward the U.K., Italy, and China. Results suggest that implications from pathogen psychology might be more limited than previously thought and apply only to specific out-group members.
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新冠肺炎威胁与群体间态度有关吗?英国测试。
社会和进化心理学家提出,人类已经获得了一种促进病原体回避行为的进化机制:行为免疫系统(BIS)。先前的研究表明,BIS对小组外成员产生了负面态度。鉴于病因回避心理与个人对新冠肺炎全球大流行的反应明显相关,本研究考察了在大流行期间对潜在致病性外群体的态度是否会反映BIS。使用2020年5月在英国3个权力下放国家(英格兰、苏格兰和威尔士)收集的大规模面板数据(N=1548),我们研究了感知到的新冠肺炎威胁是否与对与最初疫情有关的2个不同国家门诊组(意大利和中国)以及组内(英国)的负面态度有关,对这三个国家的结果进行的迷你分析显示,新冠肺炎威胁与对英国、意大利和中国的态度只有非常微弱的关联。结果表明,病原体心理学的含义可能比以前认为的更为有限,只适用于特定的外部群体成员。
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来源期刊
Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences
Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences Psychology-Social Psychology
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
15.40%
发文量
62
期刊介绍: Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences (EBS) publishes manuscripts that advance the study of human behavior from an evolutionary perspective, with an emphasis on work that integrates evolutionary theory with other approaches and perspectives from across the behavioral sciences, including the range of subdisciplines within psychology as well as the social sciences (e.g., sociology, political science, criminology) and humanities (e.g., history, literature studies). This includes a special interest in work that explores: The role of evolved mechanisms in real-world phenomena, especially when the findings hold implications for policy or practice;The expression of evolved cognitive, behavioral, and physiological mechanisms across contexts and the consequences they have for the patterns and structure of society;The interplay between evolved psychological mechanisms and cultural influences in driving behavior, including papers that test established theory in new cultural contexts. EBS publishes both empirical and theoretical manuscripts and welcomes quantitative, qualitative, and mixed-method approaches. EBS will consider research on non-human animals provided it offers some insight on a current question in the study of human behavior. The journal is also interested in articles that seek to translate evolutionary reasoning into implications for policy and practice.
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