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Title Attitudes towards Migration in a COVID-19 Context: Testing a Behavioral Immune System Hypothesis with Twitter data
Authors Yerka Freire-Vidal, Gabriela Fajardo, Carlos Rodríguez-Sickert, Eduardo Graells, José Antonio Muñoz-Reyes, Oriana Figueroa
Publication date November 2024
Abstract The COVID-19 outbreak implied many changes in the daily life of
most of the world's population for a long time, prompting severe
restrictions on sociality. The Behavioral Immune System (BIS)
suggests that when facing pathogens, a psychological mechanism would be
activated that, among other things, would generate an increase in prejudice
and discrimination towards marginalized groups, including immigrants. This
study aimed to test if people tend to enhance their rejection of minorities
and foreign groups under the threat of contagious diseases, using the
users' attitudes towards migrants in Twitter data from Chile, for
pre-pandemic and pandemic contexts. Our results appear to be mostly against
the BIS hypothesis, with some faint exceptions, since threatened users
increased their tweet production in the pandemic period, compared to
empathetic users, but the latter grew in number and also increased the reach
of their tweets between the two periods. We also found differences in the
use of language between these types of users. Alternative explanations for
these results may be context-dependent.
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Pages article 73
Volume 13
Journal name EPJ Data Science
Publisher SpringerOpen, Springer-Verlag (Heidelberg, Germany)
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