Estimated Probabilities of Positive, Vs. Negative, Events Show Separable Correlations With Covid-19 Preventive Behaviours

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Abstract

Research has associated optimism with better health-protective behaviours, but few studies have measured optimism or pessimism directly, by asking participants to estimate probabilities of events. We used these probability estimates to examine how optimism and/or pessimism relate to protecting oneself from COVID-19. When COVID-19 first reached Turkey, we asked a snowball sample of 494 Istanbul adults how much they engaged in various COVID-protective behaviours. They also estimated the probabilities of their catching COVID-19, and of other positive and negative events happening to them. Estimated probability of general positive events (optimism) correlated positively with officially-recommended helpful behaviours (e.g. wearing masks), but not with less-helpful behaviours (e.g. sharing ‘alternative’ COVID-related information online). Estimated probabilities of general negative events (pessimism), or of catching COVID, did not correlate significantly with helpful COVID-related behaviours; but they did correlate with psychopathological symptoms, as did less-helpful COVID-related behaviours. This shows important nuances can be revealed by measuring optimism and pessimism, as separate variables, using probability estimates.

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Keywords

Optimism, Pessimism, Covid-19, Health behaviours, Psychopathology, Pessimism, Optimism, Health behaviours, Psychopathology, 150, COVID-19, Article

Fields of Science

05 social sciences, 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences

Citation

Booth, R. W., Peker, M., Yavuz, B. B., & Aksu, A. (June 2022). Estimated probabilities of positive, vs. negative, events show separable correlations with COVID-19 preventive behaviours. Personality and individual differences, pp.1-5, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2022.111576

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191

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5
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GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING3
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