How safe is this trip? Judging personal safety in a pandemic based on information from different sources
How safe is this trip? Judging personal safety in a pandemic based on information from different sources
In a pre-registered experiment, we presented participants with information about the safety of traveling during a deadly pandemic and during a migration trip using five different sources (a news article, a family member, an official organization, someone with personal experience, and the travel organizer) and four different verbal descriptions of the likelihood of safety (very likely, likely, unlikely, and very unlikely). We found that both for the pandemic and migration contexts, judgments about the likelihood of safely traveling and decisions to travel were most strongly influenced by information from the respective official organizations and that participants also indicated greater willingness to share information from official organizations with others. These results are consistent with the established finding that expert sources are more persuasive. However, we also found that, regardless of source, participants thought that it would be safe to travel even when told that it was unlikely or very unlikely to be safe. Additionally, participants did not discriminate between the grades of likelihood description (such as between likely and very likely or between unlikely and very unlikely), suggesting that in the contexts examined directionality matters much more than attempts to communicate more fine-grained likelihood information with verbal phrases.
Prike, Toby
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Bijak, Jakub
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Higham, Philip
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Hilton, Jason
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Prike, Toby
3e9dc48b-6bc2-4840-8466-b31f16182820
Bijak, Jakub
e33bf9d3-fca6-405f-844c-4b2decf93c66
Higham, Philip
4093b28f-7d58-4d18-89d4-021792e418e7
Hilton, Jason
da31e515-1e34-4e9f-846d-633176bb3931
Prike, Toby, Bijak, Jakub, Higham, Philip and Hilton, Jason
(2021)
How safe is this trip? Judging personal safety in a pandemic based on information from different sources.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied.
(doi:10.1037/xap0000415).
(In Press)
Abstract
In a pre-registered experiment, we presented participants with information about the safety of traveling during a deadly pandemic and during a migration trip using five different sources (a news article, a family member, an official organization, someone with personal experience, and the travel organizer) and four different verbal descriptions of the likelihood of safety (very likely, likely, unlikely, and very unlikely). We found that both for the pandemic and migration contexts, judgments about the likelihood of safely traveling and decisions to travel were most strongly influenced by information from the respective official organizations and that participants also indicated greater willingness to share information from official organizations with others. These results are consistent with the established finding that expert sources are more persuasive. However, we also found that, regardless of source, participants thought that it would be safe to travel even when told that it was unlikely or very unlikely to be safe. Additionally, participants did not discriminate between the grades of likelihood description (such as between likely and very likely or between unlikely and very unlikely), suggesting that in the contexts examined directionality matters much more than attempts to communicate more fine-grained likelihood information with verbal phrases.
Text
Prike et al. How Safe is this Trip (authors accepted)
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 16 November 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 453972
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453972
ISSN: 1076-898X
PURE UUID: 427ab976-aeec-4e2f-92bb-78bcca67a83b
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Date deposited: 26 Jan 2022 17:51
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:53
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Author:
Toby Prike
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