Abstract

Humans typically create and maintain social bonds through interactions that occur at close social distances. The interpersonal distance of at least 1 m recommended as a relevant measure for COVID-19 contagion containment requires a significant change in everyday behavior. In a web-based experimental study conducted during the first pandemic wave (mid-April 2020), we asked 242 participants to regulate their preferred distance towards confederates who did or did not wear protective masks and gloves and whose COVID-19 test results were positive, negative, or unknown. Information concerning dispositional factors (perceived vulnerability to disease, moral attitudes, and prosocial tendencies) and situational factors (perceived severity of the situation in the country, frequency of physical and virtual social contacts, and attitudes toward quarantine) that may modulate compliance with safety prescriptions was also acquired. A Bayesian analysis approach was adopted. Individual differences did not modulate interpersonal distance. We found strong evidence in favor of a reduction of interpersonal distance towards individuals wearing protective equipment and who tested negative to COVID-19. Importantly, shorter interpersonal distances were maintained towards confederates wearing protective gear, even when their COVID-19 test result was unknown or positive. This protective equipment-related regulation of interpersonal distance may reflect an underestimation of perceived vulnerability to infection; this perception must be discouraged when pursuing individual and collective health-safety measures.

Highlights

  • On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization described the COVID-19 outbreak as a pandemic to signal that the new coronavirus disease had spread across continents, covering large parts of the world

  • A Bayesian analysis approach was applied. This approach differs from the one used within the standard framework of frequentist null-hypothesis significance testing (NHST) in that it allows evidence to be obtained in favor of the null hypothesis and discrimination between “absence of evidence” and “evidence of absence” [42]

  • We report the differences in the point estimates (ELPD-diff) and standard errors of the difference (SE-diff) of the expected log pointwise predictive density (ELPD)

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Summary

Objectives

Since the aim of this study was to investigate whether being at risk of infection modulates participants’ predicted IPD, the avatar representing the other person was associated with a negative, positive or unknown COVID-19 test result. We aimed to assess the possible role of different styles of (d) moral thinking, (e) attitudes toward quarantine, and (f) altruism. Using a model selection approach, we aimed to identify the most relevant variables to predict IPD behavior

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