| Literature DB >> 34341415 |
Jason L Harman1, Justin M Weinhardt2, James W Beck3, Ivy Mai2.
Abstract
Effective risk communication during the COVID-19 pandemic is critical for encouraging appropriate public health behaviors. One way that the public is informed about COVID-19 numbers is through reports of daily new cases. However, presenting daily cases has the potential to lead to a dynamic reasoning bias that stems from intuitive misunderstandings of accumulation. Previous work in system dynamics shows that even highly educated individuals with training in science and math misunderstand basic concepts of accumulation. In the context of COVID-19, relying on the single cue of daily new cases can lead to relaxed attitudes about the risk of COVID-19 when daily new cases begin to decline. This situation is at the very point when risk is highest because even though daily new cases have declined, the active number of cases are highest because they have been accumulating over time. In an experiment with young adults from the USA and Canada (N = 551), we confirm that individuals fail to understand accumulation regarding COVID-19, have less concern regarding COVID-19, and decrease endorsement for public health measures as new cases decline but when active cases are at the highest point. Moreover, we experimentally manipulate different dynamic data visualizations and show that presenting data highlighting active cases and minimizing new cases led to increased concern and increased endorsement for COVID-19 health measures compared to a control condition highlighting daily cases. These results hold regardless of country, political affiliation, and individual differences in decision making. This study has implications for communicating the risks of contracting COVID-19 and future public health issues.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34341415 PMCID: PMC8329148 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-95134-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experimental procedure.
Figure 2(a–d) Visual display of experimental stimuli that participants evaluated. (a) Control condition: participants were shown an unfolding graph of new daily cases (black line) and daily resolved cases (blue line). (b) Active numbers condition: participants were shown the same unfolding graph as condition and they were also provided with unfolding calculated total active case numbers for each week at the top of the graph. (c) Active graph condition: participants were shown two side by side graphs, they were shown the same unfolding graph as condition (a) and an unfolding graph of the total active case numbers for each week. (d) Simultaneous Active Numbers and Graph Condition: Participants were shown an unfolding graph of new daily cases (black line), new resolved cases (blue line), total active cases (grey line) together as well as a table break down of case numbers for each week.
Descriptive and correlation table.
| Variable | M | SD | Country | Political beliefs | Numeracy and CRT | Risk perception of COVID-19 | Avg. concern ratings | Avg. endorsement of public health behaviors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Country | 0.5 | 0.5 | 1 | 0.04** | 0.42** | − 0.02 | 0.04** | 0.02 |
| Political Beliefs | 4.72 | 2.16 | 0.04** | 1 | 0.02 | − 0.03 | − 0.15** | − 0.22** |
| Analytical Decision Making Style | 5.6 | 2.15 | 0.42** | 0.02 | 1 | − 0.07** | − 0.05** | − 0.07** |
| General Risk Perception of COVID-19 | 32.91 | 16.8 | − 0.02 | − 0.03 | − 0.07** | 1 | 0.12** | 0.02 |
| Avg. Concern Ratings | 2.84 | 1.24 | 0.04** | − 0.15** | − 0.05** | 0.12** | 1 | 0.71** |
| Avg. Endorsement of Public Health Behaviors | 3.68 | 0.93 | 0.02 | − 0.22** | − 0.07** | 0.02 | 0.71** | 1 |
N = 551. Country (0 = USA, 1 = Canada), Political Beliefs (1 = Very Liberal, 9 = Very Conservative), Analytical Decision Making Style measured using numeracy and CRT, General Risk Perceptions of COVID-19 (see “Method” section), Avg. Concern rating is the average across all concern ratings in the experiment, Avg. Endorsement of Public Health Behaviors is the average across all endorsement of public health behaviors in the experiment.
**p<.01
Figure 3(a) Endorsement of public health behaviors each week by condition. (b) Concern ratings each week by condition.
Figure 4(a) Perecent of participants who changed concern ratings between week 3 and week 4. (b) Perecent of participants who changed endorsement for public health behaviors between week 3 and week 4.
Dependent correlation between active cases and new cases with health behaviors and concern ratings by condition.
| Dependent correlation with endorsement of health behaviors | Dependent correlation with concern ratings | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Condition | Dependent correlation | Significance test for comparison | Condition | Dependent correlation | Significance test for comparison |
| Control | Correlation with health behaviors | z = − 8.313, | Control | Correlation with concern ratings | z = − 13.882, |
| Active | 0.269 | Active | 0.274 | ||
| New | 0.402 | New | 0.491 | ||
| Active number | Correlation with Health Behaviors | z = − 4.914, | Active number | Correlation with concern ratings | z = − 7.896, |
| Active | 0.299 | Active | 0.352 | ||
| New | 0.405 | New | 0.515 | ||
| Active graph | Correlation with health behaviors | z = − 4.014, | Active graph | Correlation with concern ratings | z = − 8.463, |
| Active | 0.272 | Active | 0.364 | ||
| New | 0.36 | New | 0.536 | ||
| Simultaneous active graph and number | Correlation with health behaviors | z = − 0.803, | Simultaneous active graph and number | Correlation with concern ratings | z = − 2.607, |
| Active | 0.302 | Active | 0.412 | ||
| New | 0.319 | New | 0.464 | ||