Abstract

Social liberals tend to be less pathogen-avoidant than social conservatives, a pattern consistent with a model wherein ideological differences stem from differences in threat reactivity. Here we investigate if and how individual responses to a shared threat reflect those patterns of ideological difference. In seeming contradiction to the general association between social conservatism and pathogen avoidance, the more socially conservative political party in the United States has more consistently downplayed the dangers of COVID-19 during the ongoing pandemic. This puzzle offers an opportunity to examine the contributions of multiple factors to disease avoidance. We investigated the relationship between social conservatism and COVID-19 precautionary behavior in light of the partisan landscape of the United States. We explored whether consumption of, and attitudes toward, different sources of information, as well as differential evaluation of various threats caused by the pandemic-such as direct health costs versus indirect harms to the economy and individual liberties-shape partisan differences in responses to the pandemic in ways that overwhelm the contributions of social conservatism. In two pre-registered studies, socially conservative attitudes correlate with self-reported COVID-19 prophylactic behaviors, but only among Democrats. Reflecting larger societal divisions, among Republicans and Independents, the absence of a positive relationship between social conservatism and COVID-19 precautions appears driven by lower trust in scientists, lower trust in liberal and moderate sources, lesser consumption of liberal news media, and greater economic conservatism.

Highlights

  • In the spring and summer of 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic was profoundly shaping the personal, social, and political lives of most Americans

  • In order to explore what may be accounting for the observed partisan differences in the relationship between COVID-19 precautions and socially conservative attitudes, we considered the possibility that some variables— those reflecting the partisan information environment dynamics and threat trade-offs discussed in the introduction—were statistically suppressing [54] an underlying relationship between precautions and socially conservative attitudes among Republicans and Independents

  • Consonant with the traditional-norms account of the relationship between political orientation and pathogen threat reactivity, in two studies, traditionalism and social conservatism correlated with COVID-19 precautionary behaviors, but the theorized relationship held only among Democrats

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Summary

Introduction

In the spring and summer of 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic was profoundly shaping the personal, social, and political lives of most Americans. The traditional-norms account predicts that socially conservative attitudes should associate with threat sensitivity, but does not make predictions regarding other dimensions of ideological attitudes, such as opinions concerning economic or militaristic political issues, or related personality traits such as social dominance orientation, authoritarian aggression, and submission to authority These different facets of political belief are highly correlated [7], such that they need to be ruled out as causes of any relationship between socially conservative attitudes and precautionary COVID-19 behaviors. We explore whether such demographic variables influence the relationship between precautions and conservatism

Are behavioral responses to COVID-19 related to trait pathogen avoidance?
Methods
Participants
Perceived effectiveness of prophylactics against COVID-19
COVID-19 domain-specific threat-assessments
Economic precautions
Political leadership assessments
Additional items
Results
Discussion
Full Text
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