Perceived legitimacy can moderate the effect of proscriptive versus prescriptive injunctions on intentions to comply with UK government COVID-19 guidelines and reactance

IF 2.2 3区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Journal of Applied Social Psychology Pub Date : 2022-12-05 DOI:10.1111/jasp.12950
Louisa Pavey, Sue Churchill, Paul Sparks
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Abstract

Proscriptive injunctions (i.e., telling people what they should not do) have been found in research to elicit greater perceptions of a threat to freedom, and greater reactance (anger, irritation and annoyance), than prescriptive injunctions (i.e., telling people what they should do), across several health and social behaviors. The current research investigated the effects of Injunction Type (proscriptive vs. prescriptive) and perceived legitimacy of the injunction, on intentions to comply with UK government behavioral guidelines during the COVID-19 pandemic, and on reactance. In two online experimental studies (Study 1: N = 142; Study 2: N = 307), UK participants were presented with information about UK government COVID-19 guidelines that included either a proscriptive injunction or prescriptive injunction and reported their perceptions of the legitimacy of the injunction, their intentions to comply with government guidelines, and their reactance. In both Study 1 and Study 2, the effect of Injunction Type on intentions to comply and reactance was moderated by perceived legitimacy. In both studies, when perceived legitimacy was low, participants exposed to the proscriptive injunction indicated lower intentions to comply with UK government COVID-19 guidelines than did participants exposed to the prescriptive injunction. The findings imply that using a prescriptive injunction frame can elicit greater intentions to comply than using a proscriptive injunction frame when people perceive the injunction to be unreasonable. The results are discussed in relation to the role of legitimacy in determining the effectiveness of different types of injunctions on compliance with rules and guidelines.

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感知到的合法性可以缓和禁止性禁令与规定性禁令对遵守英国政府2019冠状病毒病指导方针和抗拒意愿的影响
研究发现,在一些健康和社会行为中,禁止性禁令(即告诉人们他们不应该做什么)比说明性禁令(即告诉人们他们应该做什么)更能引起对自由威胁的感知,以及更大的抗拒(愤怒、刺激和烦恼)。目前的研究调查了禁令类型(禁止性与规定性)和对禁令合法性的感知,以及在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间遵守英国政府行为准则的意愿和抗拒的影响。在两项在线实验研究中(研究1:N = 142;研究2:N = 307),向英国参与者提供了有关英国政府COVID-19指南的信息,其中包括禁止性禁令或规定性禁令,并报告了他们对禁令合法性的看法、他们遵守政府指南的意图以及他们的抗拒。在研究1和研究2中,禁令类型对服从意愿和抗拒意愿的影响被感知合法性所调节。在这两项研究中,当感知到的合法性较低时,接触到禁止性禁令的参与者比接触到规定性禁令的参与者更不愿意遵守英国政府的COVID-19指南。研究结果表明,当人们认为禁令不合理时,使用规定性禁令框架比使用禁止性禁令框架能引起更大的遵守意愿。讨论了合法性在确定不同类型的关于遵守规则和准则的禁令的有效性方面的作用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
4.00%
发文量
95
期刊介绍: Published since 1971, Journal of Applied Social Psychology is a monthly publication devoted to applications of experimental behavioral science research to problems of society (e.g., organizational and leadership psychology, safety, health, and gender issues; perceptions of war and natural hazards; jury deliberation; performance, AIDS, cancer, heart disease, exercise, and sports).
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