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Surname order and revaccination intentions during the COVID-19 pandemic
Teachers in Japanese schools employ alphabetical surname lists that call students sooner, with surnames appearing early on these lists. We conducted Internet surveys nearly every month from March 2020 to September 2022 with the same participants, wherein we asked participants where the alphabetical...
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Published in: | Scientific reports 2024-02, Vol.14 (1), p.4750-4750, Article 4750 |
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description | Teachers in Japanese schools employ alphabetical surname lists that call students sooner, with surnames appearing early on these lists. We conducted Internet surveys nearly every month from March 2020 to September 2022 with the same participants, wherein we asked participants where the alphabetical columns of their childhood and adult surnames were located. We aimed to identify how surname order is important for the formation of noncognitive skills. During the data collection period, the COVID-19 vaccines became available; Japanese people could receive their third dose starting in December 2021. The 19th wave of the survey was conducted in January 2022. Therefore, to examine how a surname’s alphabetical order could influence intention to revaccinate, we used a subsample of data from December 2021 to September 2022. The major findings were as follows. Women with early surnames had an approximately 4% stronger likelihood of having such intentions than men with early surnames. Early name order was more strongly correlated with revaccination intention among women than among men. The surname effect for women was larger when a mixed-gender list was used compared with when it was not used. This effect was only observed for childhood surnames and not for adult surnames. |
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subjects | 692/700 692/700/3934 692/700/478 Children COVID-19 COVID-19 vaccines Data collection Hidden curriculum Humanities and Social Sciences Mixed gender list multidisciplinary Name order Natural experiment Non-cognitive skill Pandemics Schools Science Science (multidisciplinary) Surname Surveys |
title | Surname order and revaccination intentions during the COVID-19 pandemic |
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