Endorsements vs. information: Experimental evidence of backlash and parallel persuasion during the COVID-19 public health crisis

Governments try to promote prosocial behaviors like gun safety, environmental protection, opioid awareness, and during COVID-19 pandemic, behaviors like social distancing, masking, and vaccination. Democratic governments generally cannot force these behaviors on citizens; instead, they must persuade...

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Published inPNAS nexus Vol. 4; no. 6; p. pgaf185
Main Authors Baxter-King, Ryan, Coppock, Alexander, Straus, Graham, Vavreck, Lynn
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Oxford University Press 01.06.2025
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ISSN2752-6542
2752-6542
DOI10.1093/pnasnexus/pgaf185

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Abstract Governments try to promote prosocial behaviors like gun safety, environmental protection, opioid awareness, and during COVID-19 pandemic, behaviors like social distancing, masking, and vaccination. Democratic governments generally cannot force these behaviors on citizens; instead, they must persuade. Persuasive appeals mainly fall into three categories: endorsements (cues from leaders, experts, or celebrities), guidance and mandates (policies or practices issued by government), and information (the provision of facts and arguments about benefits). Using data from 10 experiments with 85,191 survey respondents conducted over a 2-year period during the COVID-19 pandemic, we assess the effectiveness of these three types of persuasive messages. We find that endorsements are variously polarizing depending on subjects’ partisan orientation toward the endorser, counterproductive in general, or wholly ineffective. We find that guidance and information treatments—when they are effective at all—move people “in parallel,” i.e. in the direction of information by similar amounts regardless of party affiliation.
AbstractList Governments try to promote prosocial behaviors like gun safety, environmental protection, opioid awareness, and during COVID-19 pandemic, behaviors like social distancing, masking, and vaccination. Democratic governments generally cannot force these behaviors on citizens; instead, they must persuade. Persuasive appeals mainly fall into three categories: endorsements (cues from leaders, experts, or celebrities), guidance and mandates (policies or practices issued by government), and information (the provision of facts and arguments about benefits). Using data from 10 experiments with 85,191 survey respondents conducted over a 2-year period during the COVID-19 pandemic, we assess the effectiveness of these three types of persuasive messages. We find that endorsements are variously polarizing depending on subjects' partisan orientation toward the endorser, counterproductive in general, or wholly ineffective. We find that guidance and information treatments--when they are effective at all--move people "in parallel," i.e. in the direction of information by similar amounts regardless of party affiliation. Keywords: COVID-19, endorsements, guidance and information, persuasion, survey experiments
Governments try to promote prosocial behaviors like gun safety, environmental protection, opioid awareness, and during COVID-19 pandemic, behaviors like social distancing, masking, and vaccination. Democratic governments generally cannot force these behaviors on citizens; instead, they must persuade. Persuasive appeals mainly fall into three categories: endorsements (cues from leaders, experts, or celebrities), guidance and mandates (policies or practices issued by government), and information (the provision of facts and arguments about benefits). Using data from 10 experiments with 85,191 survey respondents conducted over a 2-year period during the COVID-19 pandemic, we assess the effectiveness of these three types of persuasive messages. We find that endorsements are variously polarizing depending on subjects' partisan orientation toward the endorser, counterproductive in general, or wholly ineffective. We find that guidance and information treatments-when they are effective at all-move people "in parallel," i.e. in the direction of information by similar amounts regardless of party affiliation.Governments try to promote prosocial behaviors like gun safety, environmental protection, opioid awareness, and during COVID-19 pandemic, behaviors like social distancing, masking, and vaccination. Democratic governments generally cannot force these behaviors on citizens; instead, they must persuade. Persuasive appeals mainly fall into three categories: endorsements (cues from leaders, experts, or celebrities), guidance and mandates (policies or practices issued by government), and information (the provision of facts and arguments about benefits). Using data from 10 experiments with 85,191 survey respondents conducted over a 2-year period during the COVID-19 pandemic, we assess the effectiveness of these three types of persuasive messages. We find that endorsements are variously polarizing depending on subjects' partisan orientation toward the endorser, counterproductive in general, or wholly ineffective. We find that guidance and information treatments-when they are effective at all-move people "in parallel," i.e. in the direction of information by similar amounts regardless of party affiliation.
Governments try to promote prosocial behaviors like gun safety, environmental protection, opioid awareness, and during COVID-19 pandemic, behaviors like social distancing, masking, and vaccination. Democratic governments generally cannot force these behaviors on citizens; instead, they must persuade. Persuasive appeals mainly fall into three categories: endorsements (cues from leaders, experts, or celebrities), guidance and mandates (policies or practices issued by government), and information (the provision of facts and arguments about benefits). Using data from 10 experiments with 85,191 survey respondents conducted over a 2-year period during the COVID-19 pandemic, we assess the effectiveness of these three types of persuasive messages. We find that endorsements are variously polarizing depending on subjects’ partisan orientation toward the endorser, counterproductive in general, or wholly ineffective. We find that guidance and information treatments—when they are effective at all—move people “in parallel,” i.e. in the direction of information by similar amounts regardless of party affiliation.
Audience Academic
Author Straus, Graham
Vavreck, Lynn
Coppock, Alexander
Baxter-King, Ryan
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Keywords COVID-19
persuasion
guidance and information
endorsements
survey experiments
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The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of National Academy of Sciences.
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Vaccination
Title Endorsements vs. information: Experimental evidence of backlash and parallel persuasion during the COVID-19 public health crisis
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