Greater traditionalism predicts COVID-19 precautionary behaviors across 27 societies
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Date
2023Author
Samore, TheodoreFessler, Daniel M. T.
Sparks, Adam Maxwell
Holbrook, Colin
Aarøe, Lene
Baeza, Carmen Gloria
Barbato, María Teresa
Barclay, Pat
Berniūnas, Renatas
Contreras-Garduño, Jorge
Costa-Neves, Bernardo
del Pilar Grazioso, Maria
Elmas, Pınar
Fedor, Peter
Fernandez, Ana Maria
Fernández-Morales, Regina
Garcia-Marques, Leonel
Giraldo-Perez, Paulina
Gul, Pelin
Habacht, Fanny
Hasan, Youssef
Hernandez, Earl John
Jarmakowski, Tomasz
Kamble, Shanmukh
Kameda, Tatsuya
Kim, Bia
Kupfer, Tom R.
Kurita, Maho
Li, Norman P.
Lu, Junsong
Luberti, Francesca R.
Maegli, María Andrée
Mejia, Marinés
Morvinski, Coby
Naito, Aoi
Ng'ang'a, Alice
de Oliveira, Angélica Nascimento
Posner, Daniel N.
Prokop, Pavol
Shani, Yaniv
Solorzano, Walter Omar Paniagua
Stieger, Stefan
Suryani, Angela Oktavia
Tan, Lynn K. L.
Tybur, Joshua M.
Viciana, Hugo
Visine, Amandine
Wang, Jin
Wang, Xiao-Tian
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Show full item recordAbstract
People vary both in their embrace of their society's traditions, and in their perception of hazards as salient and necessitating a response. Over evolutionary time, traditions have offered avenues for addressing hazards, plausibly resulting in linkages between orientations toward tradition and orientations toward danger. Emerging research documents connections between traditionalism and threat responsivity, including pathogen-avoidance motivations. Additionally, because hazard-mitigating behaviors can conflict with competing priorities, associations between traditionalism and pathogen avoidance may hinge on contextually contingent tradeoffs. The COVID-19 pandemic provides a real-world test of the posited relationship between traditionalism and hazard avoidance. Across 27 societies (N = 7844), we find that, in a majority of countries, individuals' endorsement of tradition positively correlates with their adherence to costly COVID-19-avoidance behaviors; accounting for some of the conflicts that arise between public health precautions and other objectives further strengthens this evidence that traditionalism is associated with greater attention to hazards.
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