Literature DB >> 21443374

Community perception: the ability to assess the safety of unfamiliar neighborhoods and respond adaptively.

Daniel Tumminelli O'Brien1, David Sloan Wilson.   

Abstract

When entering an unfamiliar neighborhood, adaptive social decisions are dependent on an accurate assessment of the local safety. Studies of cities have shown that the maintenance of physical structures is correlated with the strength of ties between neighbors, which in turn is responsible for the crime level. Thus it should be theoretically possible to intuit neighborhood safety through the physical structures alone. Here we test whether people have this capacity for judging urban neighborhoods with 3 studies in which individuals observed photographs of unfamiliar neighborhoods in Binghamton, New York. Each study was facilitated by data collected during previous studies performed by the Binghamton Neighborhood Project studies. In the 1st study, observer ratings on neighborhood social quality agreed highly with reports by those living there. In the 2nd, a separate sample of participants played an economic game with adolescent residents from pictured neighborhoods. Players exhibited a lower level of trust toward adolescents from neighborhoods whose residents report lesser social quality. In the 3rd study, the maintenance of physical structures and the presence of businesses explained nearly all variation between neighborhoods in observer ratings (89%), whereas the specific features influencing play in Study 2 remained inconclusive. These and other results suggest that people use the general upkeep of physical structures when making wholesale judgments of neighborhoods, reflecting a adaptation for group living that has strong implications for the role of upkeep in urban environments.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21443374     DOI: 10.1037/a0022803

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pers Soc Psychol        ISSN: 0022-3514


  7 in total

1.  Managing the urban commons: the relative influence of individual and social incentives on the treatment of public space.

Authors:  Daniel Tumminelli O'Brien
Journal:  Hum Nat       Date:  2012-12

Review 2.  Data science for pedestrian and high street retailing as a framework for advancing urban informatics to individual scales.

Authors:  Paul M Torrens
Journal:  Urban Inform       Date:  2022-10-03

3.  Multilevel and cross-level effects of neighborhood and family influences on children's behavioral outcomes in Trinidad and Tobago: the intervening role of parental control.

Authors:  Ambika Krishnakumar; Lutchmie Narine; Jaipaul L Roopnarine; Carol Logie
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2014-08

4.  Being there: a brief visit to a neighbourhood induces the social attitudes of that neighbourhood.

Authors:  Daniel Nettle; Gillian V Pepper; Ruth Jobling; Kari Britt Schroeder
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2014-01-14       Impact factor: 2.984

5.  Disorder affects judgements about a neighbourhood: police presence does not.

Authors:  Jessica Hill; Thomas V Pollet; Daniel Nettle
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2014-03-04       Impact factor: 2.984

6.  Disorder perception is the adaptive interpretation of social cues, not just a sensitivity to randomness.

Authors:  Daniel T O'Brien
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2015-02-10

7.  Can We Barter Local Taxes for Maintaining Our Green? A Psychological Perspective.

Authors:  Annalisa Theodorou; Angelo Panno; Mariagrazia Agrimi; Emanuela Masini; Giuseppe Carrus
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-02-22
  7 in total

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