Seen and not seen: How people judge ambiguous behavior during the COVID-19 pandemic.

IF 1.3 2区 经济学 Q3 BUSINESS, FINANCE Journal of Risk and Uncertainty Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2022-12-12 DOI:10.1007/s11166-022-09396-7
Andras Molnar, Alex Moore, Carman Fowler, George Wu
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Abstract

How do we judge others' behavior when they are both seen and not seen-when we observe their behavior but not the underlying traits or history that moderate the perceived riskiness of their behavior? We investigate this question in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic: How people make sense of, and judge, vaccination-contingent behaviors-behaviors, such as going to the gym or a bar, which are considered to be more or less risky and appropriate, depending on the target's vaccination status. While decision theoretic models suggest that these judgments should depend on the probability that the target is vaccinated (e.g., the positivity of judgments should increase linearly with the probability of vaccination), in a large-scale pre-registered experiment (N = 936) we find that both riskiness and appropriateness judgments deviate substantially from such normative benchmarks. Specifically, when participants judge a stranger's behavior, without being asked to think about the stranger's vaccination status, they tend to judge these behaviors similarly positively to behaviors of others who are known to be fully vaccinated. By contrast, when participants are explicitly prompted to think about the vaccination status of others, they do so, leading them to view others more disparagingly, at times even more negatively than what a normative benchmark would imply. More broadly, these results suggest new directions for research on how people respond to risk and ambiguity. We demonstrate that even subtle cues can fundamentally alter what information is "top of mind," that is, what information is included or excluded when making judgments.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11166-022-09396-7.

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看见与看不见:在 COVID-19 大流行期间人们如何判断模棱两可的行为。
当我们观察到他人的行为,但没有观察到其潜在特征或历史,而这些特征或历史会影响我们对其行为风险性的感知时,我们如何判断他人的行为?我们在 COVID-19 大流行的背景下研究了这个问题:人们是如何理解和判断疫苗接种相关行为的--这些行为,比如去健身房或酒吧,根据目标人物的疫苗接种情况,被认为风险或适当性更高或更低。虽然决策理论模型表明,这些判断应该取决于目标接种疫苗的概率(例如,判断的积极性应该随着接种概率的增加而线性增加),但在一项大规模的预先登记实验(N = 936)中,我们发现风险性和适当性判断都大大偏离了这种规范基准。具体来说,当参与者对陌生人的行为进行判断时,如果不要求他们考虑陌生人的疫苗接种情况,他们往往会对这些行为做出与已知已接种疫苗的其他人的行为类似的积极判断。与此相反,当参与者被明确提示思考他人的疫苗接种状况时,他们就会这样做,从而导致他们对他人的看法更加轻蔑,有时甚至比规范基准所暗示的更加负面。更广泛地说,这些结果为研究人们如何应对风险和模糊性提出了新的方向。我们证明,即使是微妙的线索也能从根本上改变什么信息是 "最重要的",也就是说,在做出判断时,什么信息被纳入或排除在外:在线版本包含补充材料,可查阅 10.1007/s11166-022-09396-7。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
10.60%
发文量
29
期刊介绍: The Journal of Risk and Uncertainty (JRU) welcomes original empirical, experimental, and theoretical manuscripts dealing with the analysis of risk-bearing behavior and decision making under uncertainty. The topics covered in the journal include, but are not limited to, decision theory and the economics of uncertainty, experimental investigations of behavior under uncertainty, empirical studies of real world risk-taking behavior, behavioral models of choice under uncertainty, and risk and public policy. Review papers are welcome. The JRU does not publish finance or behavioral finance research, game theory, note length work, or papers that treat Likert-type scales as having cardinal significance. An important aim of the JRU is to encourage interdisciplinary communication and interaction between researchers in the area of risk and uncertainty. Authors are expected to provide introductory discussions which set forth the nature of their research and the interpretation and implications of their findings in a manner accessible to knowledgeable researchers in other disciplines. Officially cited as: J Risk Uncertain
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