Do Experimental Manipulations of Pathogen Avoidance Motivations Influence Conformity?

By conforming to ingroup norms, individuals coordinate with other group members, preserve cohesion, and avoid costs of exclusion. Previous experiments have shown that increased concerns about infectious disease increase conformity. However, coordination with other group members has multiple benefits...

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Veröffentlicht in:Personality & social psychology bulletin 2024-07, Vol.50 (7), p.1051-1065
Hauptverfasser: van Leeuwen, Florian, Jaeger, Bastian, Sleegers, Willem W.A., Petersen, Michael Bang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:By conforming to ingroup norms, individuals coordinate with other group members, preserve cohesion, and avoid costs of exclusion. Previous experiments have shown that increased concerns about infectious disease increase conformity. However, coordination with other group members has multiple benefits, most of which exist independent of pathogenic infection. Hence, a strong causal effect of pathogen avoidance motivations on conformity seems unlikely. Results from five experiments (N = 1,931) showed only limited support for the hypothesis that experimentally increasing pathogen avoidance motivations influences conformity. Overall, our findings are not consistent with the notion that the human mind contains a fast-acting psychological mechanism that regulates conformity as a function of short-term pathogen avoidance motivations.
ISSN:0146-1672
1552-7433
1552-7433
DOI:10.1177/01461672231160655