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Who Fears the HPV Vaccine, Who Doesn't, and Why? An Experimental Study of the Mechanisms of Cultural CognitionDan M. KahanYale University - Law School; Harvard University - Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics Donald BramanGeorge Washington University - Law School; Cultural Cognition Project Geoffrey L. CohenUniversity of Colorado - Department of Psychology Paul SlovicDecision Research; University of Oregon - Department of Psychology John GastilUniversity of Washington July 15, 2008 Law and Human Behavior, Vol. 34, pp. 501-16, 2010 Cultural Cognition Project Working Paper No. 38 Harvard Law School Program on Risk Regulation Research Paper No. 08-19 Yale Law School, Public Law Working Paper No. 163 Abstract: The cultural cognition hypothesis holds that individuals are disposed to form risk perceptions that reflect and reinforce their commitments to contested views of the good society. This paper reports the results of a study that used the controversy over mandatory HPV vaccination to test the cultural cognition hypothesis. Although public health officials have recommended that all girls aged 11 or 12 be vaccinated for HPV - a virus that causes cervical cancer and that is transmitted by sexual contact - political controversy has blocked adoption of mandatory school-enrollment vaccination programs in all but one state. A multi-stage experimental study of a large and diverse sample of American adults (N = 1,500) found evidence that cultural cognition generates disagreement about the risks and benefits of the HPV vaccine. It does so, the experiment determined, through two mechanisms: biased assimilation, and the credibility heuristic. In addition to describing the study, the paper discusses the theoretical and practical implications of these findings.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 49 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: July 17, 2008 ; Last revised: April 16, 2013Suggested CitationContact Information
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