1. Effects of symptom versus recovery video, similarity, and uncertainty orientation on the stigmatization of schizophrenia
- Author
-
Ross M.G. Norman, Richard M. Sorrentino, Yixian Li, Elizabeth Hampson, and Yang Ye
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming) ,05 social sciences ,BF ,050109 social psychology ,Certainty ,030227 psychiatry ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Orientation (mental) ,Similarity (psychology) ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Implicit attitude ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,General Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
191 participants either watched a video of a person with schizophrenia who discussed his recovery or the symptoms he experienced when acutely ill. Participants were asked to focus either on similarities or differences between themselves and the person depicted. Uncertainty orientation, the extent to which people prefer to resolve uncertainty (uncertainty-orientated) or avoid it in order to main certainty (certainty-orientated) was assessed for each participant. Results showed that for explicit attitudes, the recovery video and uncertainty orientation were significantly associated with more positive responses. The similarity manipulation interacted with video content and uncertainty orientation in influencing implicit attitudes. As expected, compared to those who are uncertainty-oriented, participants who are certainty-oriented were more likely to hold positive implicit attitudes after watching the recovery than symptoms video, particularly when attending to similarities.
- Published
- 2017