Does Social Influence Affect Covid-19 Vaccination Intention Among the Unvaccinated?

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Date

2022

Journal Title

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Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Open Access Color

GOLD

Green Open Access

Yes

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No
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Abstract

Conformist social influence is a double-edged sword when it comes to vaccine promotion. On the one hand, social influence may increase vaccine uptake by reassuring the hesitant about the safety and effectiveness of the vaccine; on the other, people may forgo the cost of vaccination when the majority is already vaccinated - giving rise to a public goods dilemma. Here, we examine whether available information on the percentage of double-vaccinated people affects COVID-19 vaccination intention among unvaccinated people in Turkey. In an online experiment, we divided participants (n = 1013) into low, intermediate, and high social influence conditions, reflecting the government's vaccine promotion messages. We found that social influence did not predict COVID-19 vaccination intention, but psychological reactance and collectivism did. People with higher reactance (intolerance of others telling one what to do and being sceptical of consensus views) had lower vaccination intention, whilst people with higher collectivism (how much a person considers group benefits over individual success) had higher vaccination intention. Our findings suggest that advertising the percentage of double-vaccinated people is not sufficient to trigger a cascade of others getting themselves vaccinated. Diverse promotion strategies reflecting the heterogeneity of individual attitudes could be more effective.

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Keywords

Collectivism, Vaccine hesitancy, Psychological reactance, Cultural evolution, Conformism, Evolution, psychological reactance, Conformism, Cultural evolution, collectivism, Collectivism, Psychological reactance, QH359-425, vaccine hesitancy, GN281-289, cultural evolution, Vaccine hesitancy, Human evolution, Research Article

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

0301 basic medicine, 03 medical and health sciences

Citation

Salali, G. D., Uysal, M. S., Bozyel, G., Akpinar, E., & Aksu, A. (11 July 2022). Does social influence affect COVID-19 vaccination intention among the unvaccinated ?. Evolutionary Human Sciences, pp. 1-23. https://doi.org/10.1017/ehs.2022.29

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OpenCitations Citation Count
14

Source

Evolutionary Human Sciences

Volume

4

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Start Page

1

End Page

23
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Scopus : 15

PubMed : 8

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Mendeley Readers : 33

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15

checked on Feb 03, 2026

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12

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338

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297

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