Do unbiased people act more rationally?—The case of comparative realism and vaccine intention

Author:

Izydorczak Kamil1ORCID,Dolinski Dariusz1,Genschow Oliver2,Kulesza Wojciech3,Muniak Pawel3ORCID,Casara Bruno Gabriel Salvador4,Suitner Caterina4

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Psychology in Wroclaw, SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Ostrowskiego 30b, 53-238 Wroclaw, Poland

2. Social Cognition Center Cologne, University of Cologne, Koln, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany

3. Warsaw Faculty, Centre for Research on Social Relations SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Wroclaw, Poland

4. Department of Developmental and Socialization Psychology, University of Padova, Padova, Veneto, Italy

Abstract

Within different populations and at various stages of the pandemic, it has been demonstrated that individuals believe they are less likely to become infected than their average peer. This is known as comparative optimism and it has been one of the reproducible effects in social psychology. However, in previous and even the most recent studies, researchers often neglected to consider unbiased individuals and inspect the differences between biased and unbiased individuals. In a mini meta-analysis of six studies (Study 1), we discovered that unbiased individuals have lower vaccine intention than biased ones. In two pre-registered, follow-up studies, we aimed at testing the reproducibility of this phenomenon and its explanations. In Study 2 we replicated the main effect and found no evidence for differences in psychological control between biased and unbiased groups. In Study 3 we also replicated the effect and found that realists hold more centric views on the trade-offs between threats from getting vaccinated and getting ill. We discuss the interpretation and implication of our results in the context of the academic and lay-persons' views on rationality. We also put forward empirical and theoretical arguments for considering unbiased individuals as a separate phenomenon in the domain of self–others comparisons.

Funder

Regionalna Inicjatywa Doskonałości Mazowsza - Regional Excellence Initiative for Masovian District

Narodowa Agencja Wymiany Akademickiej

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference57 articles.

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2. Sunstein CR. 2020 The cognitive bias that makes us panic about coronavirus. Bloomberg.Com. https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-02-28/coronavirus-panic-caused-by-probability-neglect

3. Gigerenzer G. 2020 Why What Does Not Kill Us Makes Us Panic . Project Syndicate. https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/greater-risk-literacy-can-reduce-coronavirus-fear-by-gerd-gigerenzer-2020-03

4. A Theory of Social Comparison Processes

5. Unrealistic optimism about future life events.

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