Individuals' Interest in Preventing Everyday Accidents and Crises: A Swedish Explorative Study of the Importance of Motivation

This explorative study presents an empirical examination of the connection between motivation and the measures individuals take to prevent everyday accidents and prepare for crises. Positional factors (age and gender) and situational factors (education, size of locality, and household composition) a...

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Main Author: Erika Wall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Jyväskylä 2014-01-01
Series:Human Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://humantechnology.jyu.fi/articles/volume10/2014/Wall.pdf
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spelling doaj-5c9760ecb6434a0d9b067ea1e2b846c82020-11-25T01:58:49ZengUniversity of JyväskyläHuman Technology1795-68892014-01-0110212513710.17011/ht/urn.201411203313Individuals' Interest in Preventing Everyday Accidents and Crises: A Swedish Explorative Study of the Importance of MotivationErika Wall0Mid Sweden UniversityThis explorative study presents an empirical examination of the connection between motivation and the measures individuals take to prevent everyday accidents and prepare for crises. Positional factors (age and gender) and situational factors (education, size of locality, and household composition) are included because the literature highlights their importance. The study used data gathered in a 2010/2011 poll of randomly selected Swedish residents aged 16–75 (N = 2000; 44.8% response rate). A factor analysis reduced the theoretical model for situational motivation (Guay, Vallerand, & Blanchard, 2000) from four to two dimensions: motivation and amotivation. Subsequent regression analyses statistically confirmed the connection between motivation or amotivation and the extent to which individuals pursue preventative and preparedness measures, even when accounting for positional and situational factors. These findings underscore the need for continued studies of individuals’ incentives to prevent accidents and prepare for crises and for the study of the nuances of (situational) motivation and preventive/preparedness measures.http://humantechnology.jyu.fi/articles/volume10/2014/Wall.pdfmotivationpreventionpreparednessaccidentseveryday lifeSweden
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erika Wall
spellingShingle Erika Wall
Individuals' Interest in Preventing Everyday Accidents and Crises: A Swedish Explorative Study of the Importance of Motivation
Human Technology
motivation
prevention
preparedness
accidents
everyday life
Sweden
author_facet Erika Wall
author_sort Erika Wall
title Individuals' Interest in Preventing Everyday Accidents and Crises: A Swedish Explorative Study of the Importance of Motivation
title_short Individuals' Interest in Preventing Everyday Accidents and Crises: A Swedish Explorative Study of the Importance of Motivation
title_full Individuals' Interest in Preventing Everyday Accidents and Crises: A Swedish Explorative Study of the Importance of Motivation
title_fullStr Individuals' Interest in Preventing Everyday Accidents and Crises: A Swedish Explorative Study of the Importance of Motivation
title_full_unstemmed Individuals' Interest in Preventing Everyday Accidents and Crises: A Swedish Explorative Study of the Importance of Motivation
title_sort individuals' interest in preventing everyday accidents and crises: a swedish explorative study of the importance of motivation
publisher University of Jyväskylä
series Human Technology
issn 1795-6889
publishDate 2014-01-01
description This explorative study presents an empirical examination of the connection between motivation and the measures individuals take to prevent everyday accidents and prepare for crises. Positional factors (age and gender) and situational factors (education, size of locality, and household composition) are included because the literature highlights their importance. The study used data gathered in a 2010/2011 poll of randomly selected Swedish residents aged 16–75 (N = 2000; 44.8% response rate). A factor analysis reduced the theoretical model for situational motivation (Guay, Vallerand, & Blanchard, 2000) from four to two dimensions: motivation and amotivation. Subsequent regression analyses statistically confirmed the connection between motivation or amotivation and the extent to which individuals pursue preventative and preparedness measures, even when accounting for positional and situational factors. These findings underscore the need for continued studies of individuals’ incentives to prevent accidents and prepare for crises and for the study of the nuances of (situational) motivation and preventive/preparedness measures.
topic motivation
prevention
preparedness
accidents
everyday life
Sweden
url http://humantechnology.jyu.fi/articles/volume10/2014/Wall.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT erikawall individualsinterestinpreventingeverydayaccidentsandcrisesaswedishexplorativestudyoftheimportanceofmotivation
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