| Literature DB >> 25243906 |
Daniel Västfjäll1, Ellen Peters, Paul Slovic.
Abstract
We examine how affect and accessible thoughts following a major natural disaster influence everyday risk perception. A survey was conducted in the months following the 2004 south Asian Tsunami in a representative sample of the Swedish population (N = 733). Respondents rated their experienced affect as well as the perceived risk and benefits of various everyday decision domains. Affect influenced risk and benefit perception in a way that could be predicted from both the affect-congruency and affect heuristic literatures (increased risk perception and stronger risk-benefit correlations). However, in some decision domains, self-regulation goals primed by the natural disaster predicted risk and benefit ratings. Together, these results show that affect, accessible thoughts and motivational states influence perceptions of risks and benefits.Keywords: Affect heuristic; mood; mortality salience; natural disaster; risk perception
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25243906 DOI: 10.1111/sjop.12166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Psychol ISSN: 0036-5564