传染性的还是亲社会性的?戴口罩者对白人和亚洲人的看法:COVID - 19大流行早期的跨文化比较

IF 4.8 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Social and Personality Psychology Compass Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1111/spc3.12880
Ahra Ko, Jarrod E. Bock, Junseok Ko, J. Krems
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引用次数: 0

摘要

COVID - 19大流行导致全球范围内更多地使用口罩来防止病毒传播。然而,由于戴口罩在许多国家是一种新行为,人们对人们如何看待戴口罩者以及这种看法如何影响自己的戴口罩行为的理解有限。口罩佩戴者可能被视为具有传染性或亲社会,这些看法可能因口罩佩戴者的种族和观察者的国家而异,特别是考虑到与大流行相关的反亚洲言论在美国的上升。在三个实验中(N = 579),我们调查了这些问题,在美国进行了两项研究(2020年5月和7月),在那里戴口罩是新的,反亚洲言论很普遍,在韩国进行了一项研究(2020年11月)。在那里,戴口罩相对普遍。结果表明,无论目标种族或参与者国家如何,戴面具的人都被认为传染性较低,更亲社会。这些观点在美国政治自由主义者、对感染传播更敏感的美国人(研究2)和自我认为更容易受到感染的韩国人(研究3)中更为明显。尤其是在美国,认为戴口罩的目标更亲社会,预示着更多的自我报告的戴口罩行为。同时,人们认为戴口罩的目标更具传染性,亲社会程度较低,这预示着戴口罩的人会更少(研究2)。这些发现为大流行期间对口罩和种族的社会认知提供了见解。
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Contagious or prosocial? Perceptions of mask‐wearers toward Whites and Asians: A cross‐cultural comparison during the early stage of the COVID‐19 pandemic
The COVID‐19 pandemic has led to a worldwide increase in the use of face masks to prevent viral transmission. However, as mask‐wearing was a new behavior in many countries, there was a limited understanding of how mask‐wearers are perceived and how such perceptions impact one's own mask‐wearing behavior. Mask‐wearers may be seen as contagious or prosocial, and these perceptions may vary based on the race of the mask‐wearer and the country of the observer, particularly given the rise in pandemic‐related anti‐Asian rhetoric in the U.S. In three experiments (N = 579), we investigated these questions, conducting two studies in the United States (May and July 2020), where mask‐wearing was new and anti‐Asian rhetoric has been prevalent, and one study in South Korea (November 2020), where mask‐wearing was relatively common. Results indicate that masked individuals are perceived as less contagious and more prosocial, regardless of target race or participant nation. These perceptions were more pronounced among American political liberals, Americans who are more sensitive to infection transmission (Study 2), and Koreans who self‐perceived a greater vulnerability to infection (Study 3). Especially in the U.S., perceiving the masked target as more prosocial predicted more self‐reported mask‐wearing, while perceiving the masked target as more contagious and less prosocial predicted less mask‐wearing (Study 2). These findings provide insights into social perceptions of masks and race during the pandemic.
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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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