Anticipated and experienced emotions in environmental risk perception

Affective forecasting with respect to two environmental risks (ozone depletion, air pollution) was investigated by studying tourists who travelled to either Australia or Bangkok and were thus confronted with one of these risks. We measured anticipated outcome and anticipated emotions before the jour...

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Main Authors: Gisela Bohm, Hans-Rudiger Pfister
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Judgment and Decision Making 2008-01-01
Series:Judgment and Decision Making
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.sjdm.org/bb7.pdf
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spelling doaj-5c53f486aad44df0bb6bb5d7eb834aa12021-05-02T03:21:21ZengSociety for Judgment and Decision MakingJudgment and Decision Making1930-29752008-01-013NA7386Anticipated and experienced emotions in environmental risk perceptionGisela BohmHans-Rudiger PfisterAffective forecasting with respect to two environmental risks (ozone depletion, air pollution) was investigated by studying tourists who travelled to either Australia or Bangkok and were thus confronted with one of these risks. We measured anticipated outcome and anticipated emotions before the journey, actually experienced outcome and actually experienced emotions during the journey, and anticipated outcome and emotions concerning a future encounter with the same risk after the journey. Results indicate that tourists underestimate (air pollution) or correctly predict (ozone depletion) both the seriousness of the outcome and their emotional reactions. The relationship between actual outcome and actual emotions is stronger than that between anticipated outcome and anticipated emotions. Furthermore, tourists learn from their travel experience and adjust their anticipations concerning future encounters with the environmental risk. Findings suggest that the domain of environmental risks differs from personal outcomes with respect to the process of affective forecasting. http://journal.sjdm.org/bb7.pdfanticipated emotionsaffective forecastingenvironmentalrisksrisk perception.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gisela Bohm
Hans-Rudiger Pfister
spellingShingle Gisela Bohm
Hans-Rudiger Pfister
Anticipated and experienced emotions in environmental risk perception
Judgment and Decision Making
anticipated emotions
affective forecasting
environmentalrisks
risk perception.
author_facet Gisela Bohm
Hans-Rudiger Pfister
author_sort Gisela Bohm
title Anticipated and experienced emotions in environmental risk perception
title_short Anticipated and experienced emotions in environmental risk perception
title_full Anticipated and experienced emotions in environmental risk perception
title_fullStr Anticipated and experienced emotions in environmental risk perception
title_full_unstemmed Anticipated and experienced emotions in environmental risk perception
title_sort anticipated and experienced emotions in environmental risk perception
publisher Society for Judgment and Decision Making
series Judgment and Decision Making
issn 1930-2975
publishDate 2008-01-01
description Affective forecasting with respect to two environmental risks (ozone depletion, air pollution) was investigated by studying tourists who travelled to either Australia or Bangkok and were thus confronted with one of these risks. We measured anticipated outcome and anticipated emotions before the journey, actually experienced outcome and actually experienced emotions during the journey, and anticipated outcome and emotions concerning a future encounter with the same risk after the journey. Results indicate that tourists underestimate (air pollution) or correctly predict (ozone depletion) both the seriousness of the outcome and their emotional reactions. The relationship between actual outcome and actual emotions is stronger than that between anticipated outcome and anticipated emotions. Furthermore, tourists learn from their travel experience and adjust their anticipations concerning future encounters with the environmental risk. Findings suggest that the domain of environmental risks differs from personal outcomes with respect to the process of affective forecasting.
topic anticipated emotions
affective forecasting
environmentalrisks
risk perception.
url http://journal.sjdm.org/bb7.pdf
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AT hansrudigerpfister anticipatedandexperiencedemotionsinenvironmentalriskperception
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