Psychology and the threat of contagion: Feeling vulnerable to a disease moderates the link between xenophobic thoughts and support for ingroup-protective actions
The widespread threat of contagious disease disrupts not only everyday life but also psychological experience. Building on findings regarding xenophobic responses to contagious diseases, this research investigates how perceived vulnerability to a disease moderates the psychological link between peop...
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-46662022-05-19T05:47:56Z Psychology and the threat of contagion: Feeling vulnerable to a disease moderates the link between xenophobic thoughts and support for ingroup-protective actions KIM, Heejung S. EOM, Kimin CHUANG, Roxie SHERMAN, David K. The widespread threat of contagious disease disrupts not only everyday life but also psychological experience. Building on findings regarding xenophobic responses to contagious diseases, this research investigates how perceived vulnerability to a disease moderates the psychological link between people’s xenophobic thoughts and support for ingroup-protective actions. Three datasets collected during the time of Ebola (N = 867) and COVID-19 (Ns = 992 and 926) measured perceived disease risk, group-serving biases (i.e., xenophobic thoughts), and support for restrictive travel policies (i.e., ingroup-protective actions). Using correlational and quasi-experimental analyses, results indicated that for people who perceive greater disease risk, the association between group-serving bias and restrictive policy support is weakened. This weakened association occurred because people who felt more vulnerable to these diseases increased support for ingroup-protective actions more strongly than xenophobic thoughts. This research underscores the importance of understanding the impact of threats on psychological processes beyond the impact on psychological outcomes. 2021-08-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3409 info:doi/10.1177/01461672211037138 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4666/viewcontent/kim.eom_.chuang.sherman.pspb_.2021.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University disease threat vulnerability xenophobia group protection public policy Diseases Health Psychology |
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disease threat vulnerability xenophobia group protection public policy Diseases Health Psychology KIM, Heejung S. EOM, Kimin CHUANG, Roxie SHERMAN, David K. Psychology and the threat of contagion: Feeling vulnerable to a disease moderates the link between xenophobic thoughts and support for ingroup-protective actions |
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The widespread threat of contagious disease disrupts not only everyday life but also psychological experience. Building on findings regarding xenophobic responses to contagious diseases, this research investigates how perceived vulnerability to a disease moderates the psychological link between people’s xenophobic thoughts and support for ingroup-protective actions. Three datasets collected during the time of Ebola (N = 867) and COVID-19 (Ns = 992 and 926) measured perceived disease risk, group-serving biases (i.e., xenophobic thoughts), and support for restrictive travel policies (i.e., ingroup-protective actions). Using correlational and quasi-experimental analyses, results indicated that for people who perceive greater disease risk, the association between group-serving bias and restrictive policy support is weakened. This weakened association occurred because people who felt more vulnerable to these diseases increased support for ingroup-protective actions more strongly than xenophobic thoughts. This research underscores the importance of understanding the impact of threats on psychological processes beyond the impact on psychological outcomes. |
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text |
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KIM, Heejung S. EOM, Kimin CHUANG, Roxie SHERMAN, David K. |
author_facet |
KIM, Heejung S. EOM, Kimin CHUANG, Roxie SHERMAN, David K. |
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KIM, Heejung S. |
title |
Psychology and the threat of contagion: Feeling vulnerable to a disease moderates the link between xenophobic thoughts and support for ingroup-protective actions |
title_short |
Psychology and the threat of contagion: Feeling vulnerable to a disease moderates the link between xenophobic thoughts and support for ingroup-protective actions |
title_full |
Psychology and the threat of contagion: Feeling vulnerable to a disease moderates the link between xenophobic thoughts and support for ingroup-protective actions |
title_fullStr |
Psychology and the threat of contagion: Feeling vulnerable to a disease moderates the link between xenophobic thoughts and support for ingroup-protective actions |
title_full_unstemmed |
Psychology and the threat of contagion: Feeling vulnerable to a disease moderates the link between xenophobic thoughts and support for ingroup-protective actions |
title_sort |
psychology and the threat of contagion: feeling vulnerable to a disease moderates the link between xenophobic thoughts and support for ingroup-protective actions |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2021 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3409 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4666/viewcontent/kim.eom_.chuang.sherman.pspb_.2021.pdf |
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