Faith and science mindsets as predictors of COVID-19 concern: a three-wave longitudinal study
Faith and science mindsets as predictors of COVID-19 concern: a three-wave longitudinal study
The COVID-19 pandemic allowed for a naturalistic, longitudinal investigation of the relationship between faith and science mindsets and concern about COVID-19. Our goal was to examine two possible directional relationships: (Model 1) COVID-19 concern ➔ disease avoidance and self-protection motivations ➔ science and faith mindsets versus (Model 2) science and faith mindsets ➔ COVID-19 concern. We surveyed 858 Mechanical Turk workers in three waves of a study conducted in March, April, and June 2020. We found that science mindsets increased whereas faith mindsets decreased (regardless of religious type) during the early months of the pandemic. Further, bivariate correlations and autoregressive cross-lagged analyses indicated that science mindset was positive predictor of COVID-19 concern, in support of Model 2. Faith mindset was not associated with COVID-19 concern. However, faith mindset was a negative predictor of science mindset. We discuss the need for more research regarding the influence of science and faith mindsets as well as the societal consequences of the pandemic.
Johnson, Kathryn A.
8a378a72-0ad2-4593-90f2-68aa40d75c7b
Baraldi, Amanda N.
1102320b-8174-4d1d-a1d7-21c6fbdd7566
Moon, Jordan W.
552fac5b-2f9e-48c3-9546-a0844409098b
Okun, Morris A.
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Cohen, Adam B.
7d7e1ded-a9f6-4bc5-8e72-11adc647b220
30 June 2021
Johnson, Kathryn A.
8a378a72-0ad2-4593-90f2-68aa40d75c7b
Baraldi, Amanda N.
1102320b-8174-4d1d-a1d7-21c6fbdd7566
Moon, Jordan W.
552fac5b-2f9e-48c3-9546-a0844409098b
Okun, Morris A.
79016f34-e745-4209-b434-8753f938048f
Cohen, Adam B.
7d7e1ded-a9f6-4bc5-8e72-11adc647b220
Johnson, Kathryn A., Baraldi, Amanda N., Moon, Jordan W., Okun, Morris A. and Cohen, Adam B.
(2021)
Faith and science mindsets as predictors of COVID-19 concern: a three-wave longitudinal study.
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 96, [104186].
(doi:10.1016/j.jesp.2021.104186).
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic allowed for a naturalistic, longitudinal investigation of the relationship between faith and science mindsets and concern about COVID-19. Our goal was to examine two possible directional relationships: (Model 1) COVID-19 concern ➔ disease avoidance and self-protection motivations ➔ science and faith mindsets versus (Model 2) science and faith mindsets ➔ COVID-19 concern. We surveyed 858 Mechanical Turk workers in three waves of a study conducted in March, April, and June 2020. We found that science mindsets increased whereas faith mindsets decreased (regardless of religious type) during the early months of the pandemic. Further, bivariate correlations and autoregressive cross-lagged analyses indicated that science mindset was positive predictor of COVID-19 concern, in support of Model 2. Faith mindset was not associated with COVID-19 concern. However, faith mindset was a negative predictor of science mindset. We discuss the need for more research regarding the influence of science and faith mindsets as well as the societal consequences of the pandemic.
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Accepted/In Press date: 21 June 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 June 2021
Published date: 30 June 2021
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Local EPrints ID: 505404
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505404
ISSN: 0022-1031
PURE UUID: 909f5d92-f6d2-442b-be3b-d856cb99a021
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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2025 17:04
Last modified: 08 Oct 2025 02:17
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Contributors
Author:
Kathryn A. Johnson
Author:
Amanda N. Baraldi
Author:
Jordan W. Moon
Author:
Morris A. Okun
Author:
Adam B. Cohen
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