COVID-19 and Social Distancing: A Cross-Cultural Study of Interpersonal Distance Preferences and Touch Behaviors Before and During the Pandemic
Date
2024Author
Croy, Ilona || Heller, Carina || Akello, Grace || Anjum, Afifa || Atama, Chiemezie || Avsec, Andreja || Bizumic, Boris || Borges Rodrigues, Ricardo || Boussena, Mahmoud || Butovskaya, Marina || Can, Seda || Cetinkaya, Hakan || Contreras-Garduno, Jorge || Lopes, Rui Costa || Czub, Marcin || Demuthova, Slavka || Dronova, Daria || Dural, Seda || Eya, Oliver Ifeanyi || Fatma, Mokadem || Frackowiak, Tomasz || Guemaz, Farida || Hromatko, Ivana || Kafetsios, Konstantinos || Kavcic, Tina || Khilji, Imran || Kruk, Magdalena || Lazar, Catalin || Lindholm, Torun || Londero-Santos, Amanda || Monaghan, Conal || Shahid, Anam || Musil, Bojan || Natividade, Jean Carlos || Oberzaucher, Elisabeth || Oleszkiewicz, Anna || Onyishi, Ike E. || Onyishi, Charity || Pagani, Ariela F. || Parise, Miriam || Pisanski, Katarzyna || Plohl, Nejc || Popa, Camelia || Prokop, Pavol || Rizwan, Muhammad || Sainz, Mario || Sargautyte, Ruta || Sharad, Shivantika || Valentova, Jaroslava || Varella, Marco || Yakhlef, Belkacem || Yoo, Gyesook || Zager Kocjan, Gaja || Zupancic, Maja || Sorokowska, Agnieszka
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The COVID-19 pandemic has led to the introduction of unprecedented safety measures, one of them being physical distancing recommendations. Here, we assessed whether the pandemic has led to long-term effects on two important physical distancing aspects, namely interpersonal distance preferences and interpersonal touch behaviors. We analyzed nearly 14,000 individual cases from two large, cross-cultural surveys - the first conducted 2 years prior to the pandemic and the second during a relatively stable period of a decreased infection rate in May-June 2021. Preferred interpersonal distances increased by 54% globally during the COVID-19 pandemic. This increase was observable across all types of relationships, all countries, and was more pronounced in individuals with higher self-reported vulnerability to diseases. Unexpectedly, participants reported a higher incidence of interpersonal touch behaviors during than before the pandemic. We discuss our results in the context of prosocial and self-protection motivations that potentially promote different social behaviors.
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