| Literature DB >> 27856727 |
Jens Bender1, Tobias Rothmund2, Peter Nauroth3, Mario Gollwitzer3.
Abstract
Laypersons' engagement with science has grown over the last decade, especially in Internet environments. While this development has many benefits, scientists also face the challenge of devaluation and public criticism by laypersons. Embedding this phenomenon in social-psychological theories and research on value-behavior correspondence, we investigated moral threat as a factor influencing laypersons' engagement with science. Across three studies, we hypothesized and found that moral values shape the way laypersons evaluate and communicate about science when these values are threatened in a given situation and central to people's self-concept. However, prior research on the underlying mechanism of moral threat effects cannot fully rule out value salience as an alternative explanation. To close this gap, we situationally induced value salience while varying the degree of moral threat (Study 3). Our findings indicate that moral threat amplifies the influence of moral values on laypersons' evaluation of science above and beyond value salience.Entities:
Keywords: moral threat; public engagement with science; value centrality; value salience; value-behavior correspondence
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27856727 DOI: 10.1177/0146167216671518
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pers Soc Psychol Bull ISSN: 0146-1672