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Journal Publication

Experimental evidence that changing beliefs about mask efficacy and social norms increase mask wearing for COVID-19 risk reduction: Results from the United States and Italy

Researchers survey representative populations in the U.S. and Italy about their mask use, providing data on attitudes and behaviors around mask wearing.

After running two vignette-based experiments on Italian and American participants, researchers analyze the causal relationship between beliefs, social norms, and reported intentions to engage in mask promoting behavior. They find that educational information about why mask wearing is prosocial increases intent to wear masks in the U.S., but not in Italy, and in both countries, participants reporting they regularly wore masks were also likely to intend to do so in the future and encourage others to do so.

Abstract and Citation

Bokemper SE, Cucciniello M, Rotesi T, Pin P, Malik AA, Willebrand K, et al. (2021) Experimental evidence that changing beliefs about mask efficacy and social norms increase mask wearing for COVID-19 risk reduction: Results from the United States and Italy. PLoS ONE 16(10): e0258282. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258282