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Lessons From the UK's Lockdown: Discourse on Behavioural Science in Times of COVID-19

Jet G Sanders 1
Alessia Tosi 1, 2
Sandra Obradovic 3
Ilaria Miligi 1
Liam Delaney 1
2
 
Independent researcher, United Kingdom
3
 
School of Psychology and Counselling, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, The Open University, United Kingdom
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-06-17
scimago Q2
wos Q1
SJR0.872
CiteScore6.3
Impact factor2.9
ISSN16641078
General Psychology
Abstract

In recent years behavioural science has quickly become embedded in national level governance. As the contributions of behavioural science to the UK's COVID-19 response policies in early 2020 became apparent, a debate emerged in the British media about its involvement. This served as a unique opportunity to capture public discourse and representation of behavioural science in a fast-track, high-stake context. We aimed at identifying elements which foster and detract from trust and credibility in emergent scientific contributions to policy making. With this in mind, in Study 1 we use corpus linguistics and network analysis to map the narrative around the key behavioural science actors and concepts which were discussed in the 647 news articles extracted from the 15 most read British newspapers over the 12-week period surrounding the first hard UK lockdown of 2020. We report and discuss (1) the salience of key concepts and actors as the debate unfolded, (2) quantified changes in the polarity of the sentiment expressed toward them and their policy application contexts, and (3) patterns of co-occurrence via network analyses. To establish public discourse surrounding identified themes, in Study 2 we investigate how salience and sentiment of key themes and relations to policy were discussed in original Twitter chatter (N = 2,187). In Study 3, we complement these findings with a qualitative analysis of the subset of news articles which contained the most extreme sentiments (N = 111), providing an in-depth perspective of sentiments and discourse developed around keywords, as either promoting or undermining their credibility in, and trust toward behaviourally informed policy. We discuss our findings in light of the integration of behavioural science in national policy making under emergency constraints.

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GOST Copy
Sanders J. G. et al. Lessons From the UK's Lockdown: Discourse on Behavioural Science in Times of COVID-19 // Frontiers in Psychology. 2021. Vol. 12.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Sanders J. G., Tosi A., Obradovic S., Miligi I., Delaney L. Lessons From the UK's Lockdown: Discourse on Behavioural Science in Times of COVID-19 // Frontiers in Psychology. 2021. Vol. 12.
RIS |
Cite this
RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.647348
UR - https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.647348
TI - Lessons From the UK's Lockdown: Discourse on Behavioural Science in Times of COVID-19
T2 - Frontiers in Psychology
AU - Sanders, Jet G
AU - Tosi, Alessia
AU - Obradovic, Sandra
AU - Miligi, Ilaria
AU - Delaney, Liam
PY - 2021
DA - 2021/06/17
PB - Frontiers Media S.A.
VL - 12
PMID - 34220617
SN - 1664-1078
ER -
BibTex
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2021_Sanders,
author = {Jet G Sanders and Alessia Tosi and Sandra Obradovic and Ilaria Miligi and Liam Delaney},
title = {Lessons From the UK's Lockdown: Discourse on Behavioural Science in Times of COVID-19},
journal = {Frontiers in Psychology},
year = {2021},
volume = {12},
publisher = {Frontiers Media S.A.},
month = {jun},
url = {https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.647348},
doi = {10.3389/fpsyg.2021.647348}
}