3.9 Article

COVID-19 shifts mortality salience, activities, and values in the United States: Big data analysis of online adaptation

期刊

HUMAN BEHAVIOR AND EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES
卷 3, 期 1, 页码 107-126

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbe2.251

关键词

American values; big data; blogs; collectivism; coronavirus pandemic; COVID-19; ecology; evolutionary psychology; Google Trends; human behavior; human social behavior; internet; internet forums; mortality salience; social media; social theory; subsistence activities; survival threat; terror management theory; Theory of Social Change; Cultural Evolution; and Human Development; Twitter; values

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The life-threatening pandemic has led to societal changes, with humans shifting towards collectivism and rural subsistence activities while decreasing aspirations for wealth. Analysis of big data samples indicates that subjective mortality salience, engagement in subsistence activities, and collectivism have significantly increased during this period. These findings suggest that humans may have an evolutionarily conditioned response to mortality levels and available resources in society.
What is the effect of a life-threatening pandemic at the societal level? An expanded Theory of Social Change, Cultural Evolution, and Human Development predicts that, during a period of increasing survival threat and decreasing prosperity, humans will shift toward the psychology and behavior typical of the small-scale, collectivistic, and rural subsistence ecologies in which we evolved. In particular, subjective mortality salience, engagement in subsistence activities, and collectivism will all increase, while the aspiration to be wealthy will decrease. Because coronavirus has forced unprecedented proportions of human activity online, we tested hypotheses derived from the theory by analyzing big data samples for 70days before and 70days after the coronavirus pandemic stimulated President Trump to declare a national emergency. Google searches were used for an exploratory study; the exploratory study was followed by three independent replications on Twitter, internet forums, and blogs. Across all four internet platforms, terms related to subjective mortality salience, engagement in subsistence activities, and collectivism showed massive increases. These findings, coupled with prior research testing this theory, indicate that humans may have an evolutionarily conditioned response to the level of death and availability of material resources in society. More specifically, humans may shift their behavior and psychology toward that found in subsistence ecologies under conditions of high mortality and low prosperity or, conversely, toward behavior and psychology found in modern commercial ecologies under conditions of low mortality and high prosperity.

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