Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Dominican University of California

2021

Covid-19

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

You Can't Tell Me What To Do! Or Maybe You Can, Benjamin Rosenberg Jul 2021

You Can't Tell Me What To Do! Or Maybe You Can, Benjamin Rosenberg

Psychology | Faculty Scholarship

All of these mandates have become so commonplace over the past months that we have stopped paying attention because most people are doing all of these things. But looking back at people’s responses to these public health messages reveals something slightly different: In reaction to the pressure to conform to public health guidance, some Americans seemed to go out of their way to violate each and every one of these recommendations.

These reactions seem to underscore a fundamental human truth—people generally do not like being told what to do. This observation lines up with a classic idea from social psychology, …


Freedom, Covid-19, And Resistance To Public Health Orders, Benjamin Rosenberg Apr 2021

Freedom, Covid-19, And Resistance To Public Health Orders, Benjamin Rosenberg

Psychology | Faculty Scholarship

As we look back on one year since the first Covid-19 lockdowns went into effect in the United States, several truths about this ever-changing virus have emerged. For one, well-fitting, multi-layered face masks significantly reduce people’s likelihood of spreading or catching Covid-19 (e.g., Leung et al., 2020), and the vaccines similarly reduce the risk of spread and infection (Thompson et al., 2021). Second, things that were, at best, at the outskirts of people’s attention have become commonplace over the past year: hand sanitizer, social distancing, mask wearing, vaccinations. The related third truth is that over the past year, most Americans …