Risk comparisons, conflict, and risk acceptability claims

被引:17
作者
Johnson, BB [1 ]
机构
[1] Bur Risk Anal, Div Sci Res & Technol, New Jersey Dept Environm Protect, Trenton, NJ 08625 USA
关键词
industrial risk; risk communication; risk comparisons;
D O I
10.1111/j.0272-4332.2004.00417.x
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Despite many claims for and against the use of risk comparisons in risk communication, few empirical studies have explored their effect. Even fewer have examined the public's relative preferences among different kinds of risk comparisons. Two studies, published in this journal in 1990 and 2003, used seven measures of "acceptability" to examine public reaction to 14 examples of risk comparisons, as used by a hypothetical factory manager to explain risks of his ethylene oxide plant. This study examined the effect on preferences of scenarios involving low or high conflict between the factory manager and residents of the hypothetical town (as had the 2003 study), and inclusion of a claim that the comparison demonstrated the risks' acceptability. It also tested the Finucane et al. (2000) affect hypothesis that information emphasizing low risks-as in these risk comparisons-would raise benefits estimates without changing risk estimates. Using similar but revised scenarios, risk comparison examples (10 instead of 14), and evaluation measures, an opportunity sample of 303 New Jersey residents rated the comparisons, and the risks and benefits of the factory. On average, all comparisons received positive ratings on all evaluation measures in all conditions. Direct and indirect measures showed that the conflict manipulation worked; overall, No-Conflict and Conflict scenarios evoked scores that were not significantly different. The attachment to each risk comparison of a risk acceptability claim ("So our factory's risks should be acceptable to you.") did not worsen ratings relative to conditions lacking this claim. Readers who did or did not see this claim were equally likely to infer an attempt to persuade them to accept the risk from the comparison. As in the 2003 article, there was great individual variability in inferred rankings of the risk comparisons. However, exposure to the risk comparisons did not reduce risk estimates significantly (while raising benefit estimates), and Conflict-Claim respondents found the risk of the hypothetical factory less acceptable than No-Conflict respondents. Results suggest that neither risk comparisons nor risk acceptability claims are automatically anathema to audiences, but they may have tiny or unintended effects on audience judgments about risky situations.
引用
收藏
页码:131 / 145
页数:15
相关论文
共 32 条
[11]   A deliberative method for ranking risks (I): Overview and test bed development [J].
Florig, HK ;
Morgan, MG ;
Morgan, KM ;
Jenni, KE ;
Fischhoff, B ;
Fischbeck, PS ;
DeKay, ML .
RISK ANALYSIS, 2001, 21 (05) :913-921
[12]   THE RISKS OF PUTTING THE NUMBERS IN CONTEXT - A CAUTIONARY TALE [J].
FREUDENBURG, WR ;
RURSCH, JA .
RISK ANALYSIS, 1994, 14 (06) :949-958
[13]   Rooms with a view: Informal settings for public dialogue [J].
Gill, AM .
SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES, 1996, 9 (06) :633-643
[14]   EVALUATING RISK COMMUNICATION - NARRATIVE VS TECHNICAL PRESENTATIONS OF INFORMATION ABOUT RADON [J].
GOLDING, D ;
KRIMSKY, S ;
PLOUGH, A .
RISK ANALYSIS, 1992, 12 (01) :27-35
[15]   Communicating worst-case scenarios: Neighbors' views of industrial accident management [J].
Johnson, BB ;
Chess, C .
RISK ANALYSIS, 2003, 23 (04) :829-840
[16]   Are some risk comparisons more effective under conflict?:: A replication and extension of Roth et al. [J].
Johnson, BB .
RISK ANALYSIS, 2003, 23 (04) :767-780
[17]  
JOHNSON BB, 1997, CONSUMER CONFIDENCE
[18]  
Johnson BB, 1993, RISK ISSUES HLTH SAF, V4, P189
[19]   RADON RISK INFORMATION AND VOLUNTARY PROTECTION - EVIDENCE FROM A NATURAL EXPERIMENT [J].
JOHNSON, FR ;
LUKEN, RA .
RISK ANALYSIS, 1987, 7 (01) :97-107
[20]   Community reappraisal of the perceived health effects of a petroleum refinery [J].
Luginaah, IN ;
Taylor, SM ;
Elliott, SJ ;
Eyles, JD .
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2002, 55 (01) :47-61