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1980 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

Facts and Fears: Understanding Perceived Risk

Authors : Paul Slovic, Baruch Fischhoff, Sarah Lichtenstein

Published in: Societal Risk Assessment

Publisher: Springer US

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Subjective judgments, whether by experts or lay people, are a major component in any risk assessment. If such judgments are faulty, efforts at public and environmental protection are likely to be misdirected. The present paper begins with an analysis of biases exhibited by lay people and experts when they make judgments about risk. Next, the similarities and differences between lay and expert evaluations are examined in the context of a specific set of activities and technologies. Finally, some special issues are discussed, including the difficulty of reconciling divergent opinions about risk, the possible irrelevance of voluntariness as a determinant of acceptable risk, the importance of catastrophic potential in determing perceptions and triggering social conflict, and the need to facilitate public participation in the management of hazards.

Metadata
Title
Facts and Fears: Understanding Perceived Risk
Authors
Paul Slovic
Baruch Fischhoff
Sarah Lichtenstein
Copyright Year
1980
Publisher
Springer US
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-0445-4_9