Effects of fear and anger on perceived risks of terrorism : a national field experiment.

Auteur(s)
Lerner, J.S. Gonzalez, R.M. Small, D.A. & Fischhoff, B.
Jaar
Samenvatting

The aftermath of September 11th highlights the need to understand how emotion affects citizens’ responses to risk. It also provides an opportunity to test current theories of such effects. Based on appraisal-tendency theory (Lerner & Keltner, 2000, 2001), we predicted opposite effects for anger and fear, on risk judgments and policy preferences. In a nationally representative sample of Americans (N = 973, ages 13-88), fear increased risk estimates and plans for precautionary measures; anger did the opposite. These patterns emerged with both experimentally induced emotions and naturally occurring ones. Males had less pessimistic risk estimates than did females, emotion differences explaining some 80% of the gender difference. Emotions also predicted diverging public policy preferences. Discussion focuses on theoretical, methodological, and policy implications. (Author/publisher)

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Publicatie

Bibliotheeknummer
20030848 ST [electronic version only]
Uitgave

[S.l.:s.n.], 2003, 28 p., 29 ref. (in press version) / Also published in: Psychological Science, Vol. 14 (2003), No. 2 (March), p. 144-150

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