Vaccine
skeptics actually think differently than other people
Texas
Tech University
In 2000, the measles virus was declared eliminated from the United States. Despite cases coming in from outside the country, there were few outbreaks because most people were vaccinated against measles. And then 2019 happened.
The
U.S. saw 1,282 confirmed cases in 31 states -- the greatest number reported
since 1992, with nearly three-fourths linked to recent outbreaks in New York,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Most cases were
among people who were not vaccinated against measles.
After
events like this, many people express confusion about others' hesitancy or
unwillingness to get vaccinated or to vaccinate their children, a concept
called vaccine skepticism. As vaccine skepticism has become increasingly
widespread, two researchers in the Texas Tech University Department of
Psychological Sciences have suggested a possible explanation.
In
an article published recently in the journal Vaccine, Mark LaCour
and Tyler Davis suggest some people find vaccines risky because they
overestimate the likelihood of negative events, particularly those that are
rare.
The
fact that these overestimations carry over through all kinds of negative events
-- not just those related to vaccines -- suggests that people higher in vaccine
skepticism actually may process information differently than people lower in
vaccine skepticism, said Davis, an associate professor of experimental
psychology and director of the Caprock FMRI Laboratory.
"We might have assumed that people who are high in vaccine skepticism would have overestimated the likelihood of negative vaccine-related events, but it is more surprising that this is true for negative, mortality-related events as a broader category," Davis said.
"Here we saw an overestimation of rare events for things that don't have anything to do with vaccination. This suggests that there are basic cognitive or affective variables that influence vaccine skepticism."
In
their first experiment, LaCour and Davis surveyed 158 participants to determine
the level of vaccine skepticism underlying their perceived dangers, feelings of
powerlessness, disillusionment and trust in authorities regarding vaccines.
Participants then estimated the frequency of death associated with 40 different causes, ranging from cancers, animal bites and childbirth to fireworks, flooding and car accidents.
LaCour and Davis found that people higher in vaccine skepticism were less accurate in their estimations of how frequently these causes of death occur. Specifically, they found that higher vaccine skepticism was associated with an overestimation of rare events.
Participants then estimated the frequency of death associated with 40 different causes, ranging from cancers, animal bites and childbirth to fireworks, flooding and car accidents.
LaCour and Davis found that people higher in vaccine skepticism were less accurate in their estimations of how frequently these causes of death occur. Specifically, they found that higher vaccine skepticism was associated with an overestimation of rare events.
The
second experiment followed the same procedures as the first, but participants
additionally estimated the frequency of neutral or positive events -- such as
papal visits to the United States, triplet births or Willie Nelson concerts --
to test whether the negative tone of mortality statistics may play a role.
LaCour and Davis found that people higher in vaccine skepticism were less accurate in their estimations of mortality-related events and overestimated the negative events more than the neutral/positive events.
LaCour and Davis found that people higher in vaccine skepticism were less accurate in their estimations of mortality-related events and overestimated the negative events more than the neutral/positive events.
"My
takeaway is that vaccine skeptics probably don't have the best understanding of
how likely or probable different events are," said LaCour, a doctoral
student in psychological sciences.
"They might be more easily swayed by anecdotal horror stories. For example, your child can have a seizure from getting vaccinated. It's extremely rare, but it is within the realm of possibility. If you were so inclined, you could follow Facebook groups that publicize extremely rare events. These cognitive distortions of anecdotes into trends are probably exacerbated by decisions to subscribe to statistically non-representative information sources."
"They might be more easily swayed by anecdotal horror stories. For example, your child can have a seizure from getting vaccinated. It's extremely rare, but it is within the realm of possibility. If you were so inclined, you could follow Facebook groups that publicize extremely rare events. These cognitive distortions of anecdotes into trends are probably exacerbated by decisions to subscribe to statistically non-representative information sources."
While
the researchers didn't find an association between a person's education level
and their vaccine skepticism, LaCour and Davis believe there is a difference in
the information being consumed and used by people higher in vaccine skepticism.
"It
may be the case that they are specifically seeking out biased information, for
example, to confirm their skeptical beliefs," Davis said.
"It could be that they have more of an attentional bias to negative, mortality-related events, which makes them remember this information better. Strategies to get the right information to people through public service announcements or formal education may work, but it doesn't seem to be an issue that people with higher vaccine skepticism are less educated in any fundamental way in terms of basic science or math education. Thus, simple increases in these alone -- without targeted informational interventions -- would seem unlikely to help."
"It could be that they have more of an attentional bias to negative, mortality-related events, which makes them remember this information better. Strategies to get the right information to people through public service announcements or formal education may work, but it doesn't seem to be an issue that people with higher vaccine skepticism are less educated in any fundamental way in terms of basic science or math education. Thus, simple increases in these alone -- without targeted informational interventions -- would seem unlikely to help."
As
LaCour noted, these results leave open many new avenues for further research.
"Do
some people encode scary stories -- for instance, hearing about a child that
has a seizure after getting vaccinated -- more strongly than others and then
consequently remember these anecdotes more easily?" he asked.
"Do they instead have certain attitudes and search their memory harder for evidence to support this belief? Is it a bit of both? How can you counteract these processes?
"Do they instead have certain attitudes and search their memory harder for evidence to support this belief? Is it a bit of both? How can you counteract these processes?
"I'm
excited that we're finding basic, cognitive factors that are linked with
vaccine skepticism: It could end up being a way of reaching this diverse
group."