Title
The more you tell me how and why to avoid spreading COVID-19, the more I feel I can spare myself the trouble. Enhancing compliance with measures against COVID-19 by counteracting side-effects of appeals for preventive behaviour. (Research)
Abstract
To curb the toll of COVID-19, citizens need to massively comply with
precautionary measures. Once a vaccine will be available that
compliance will mostly consist of getting vaccinated. Until then, it
consists of things like wearing a mouth mask and social distancing.
Since the start of the first COVID-19 outbreak in Belgium, however,
our country has witnessed a decline of people's motivation to show
those behaviours. Why have some people not followed the rules?
Why have other people lost the motivation that they once had? Why
has the relaxation of rules entailed more violations of remaining
ones? Several explanations have been suggested, but arguably the
most fundamental cause has been ignored: biases in risk perception
(such as comparative optimism) and the ironic inflation of those
biases by precisely those appeals meant to motivate people to follow
precautionary rules. We will in a longitudinal study on representative
samples in regions of Belgium differently affected by COVID-19 show
how differences in risk perception between regions and changes in it
over time are associated with differences and changes in the
motivation to follow precautionary rules. We will through an
experiment on a representative sample show which media messages
enhance those biases and which messages reduce them. Our project
will thus yield specific and readily applicable solutions to achieve an
urgently needed better compliance with precautionary measures.
Period of project
01 November 2020 - 31 October 2021