Behavioral extremity moderates the association between certainty in attitudes about COVID and willingness to engage in mitigation-related behaviors |
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Authors: | Joseph J. Siev Richard E. Petty Borja Paredes Pablo Briñol |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University, Ohio, Columbus, USA;2. Faculty of Psychology, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid, Spain |
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Abstract: | People generally intend to act more on beliefs and attitudes about which they have greater certainty. However, we introduce a boundary condition to the positive association between certainty and behavioral intentions—behavioral extremity. Uncertainty about a threatening issue like COVID-19 can be disconcerting, and we propose that uncertain people cope in part through increased openness to extreme actions like accepting risky medical treatments and aggression toward those defying mitigation policies. Testing this, we compiled and analyzed all the data on certainty about COVID-19 mitigation policies and willingness to engage in mitigation-related behaviors that our lab collected during the pandemic (6 samples, 20 behaviors, Ns up to 1496). External ratings of the behaviors' extremity moderated certainty-willingness associations: whereas greater certainty was associated with increased willingness to engage in moderate behaviors (the typical result), lower certainty was associated with increased willingness to engage in extreme behaviors, especially among those worried about becoming ill. |
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Keywords: | attitude–behavior consistency attitude certainty compliance COVID-19 extremism perceived threat public health |
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