An Experimental Approach Analyzing Who "Sees' Disorder When There is Nothing to "See": Understanding Variance of Perceptions via Personal Characteristics
abstract: Knowing that disorder is related to crime, it has become essential for criminologists to understand how and why certain individuals perceive disorder. Using data from the Perceptions of Neighborhood Disorder and Interpersonal Conflict Project, this study uses a fixed photograph of a neighb...
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-180632018-06-22T03:04:06Z An Experimental Approach Analyzing Who "Sees' Disorder When There is Nothing to "See": Understanding Variance of Perceptions via Personal Characteristics abstract: Knowing that disorder is related to crime, it has become essential for criminologists to understand how and why certain individuals perceive disorder. Using data from the Perceptions of Neighborhood Disorder and Interpersonal Conflict Project, this study uses a fixed photograph of a neighborhood, to assess whether individuals "see" disorder cues. A final sample size of n=815 respondents were asked to indicate if they saw particular disorder cues in the photograph. The results show that certain personal characteristics do predict whether an individual sees disorder. Because of the experimental design, results are a product of the individual's personal characteristics, not of the respondent's neighborhood. These findings suggest that the perception of disorder is not as clear cut as once thought. Future research should explore what about these personal characteristics foster the perception of disorder when it is not present, as well as, how to fight disorder in neighborhoods when perception plays such a substantial role. Dissertation/Thesis Scott, Christopher John (Author) Wallace, Danielle (Advisor) Katz, Charles (Committee member) Ready, Justin (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Criminology Disorder Neighborhood Perceptions eng 48 pages M.S. Criminology and Criminal Justice 2013 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18063 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2013 |
collection |
NDLTD |
language |
English |
format |
Dissertation |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
Criminology Disorder Neighborhood Perceptions |
spellingShingle |
Criminology Disorder Neighborhood Perceptions An Experimental Approach Analyzing Who "Sees' Disorder When There is Nothing to "See": Understanding Variance of Perceptions via Personal Characteristics |
description |
abstract: Knowing that disorder is related to crime, it has become essential for criminologists to understand how and why certain individuals perceive disorder. Using data from the Perceptions of Neighborhood Disorder and Interpersonal Conflict Project, this study uses a fixed photograph of a neighborhood, to assess whether individuals "see" disorder cues. A final sample size of n=815 respondents were asked to indicate if they saw particular disorder cues in the photograph. The results show that certain personal characteristics do predict whether an individual sees disorder. Because of the experimental design, results are a product of the individual's personal characteristics, not of the respondent's neighborhood. These findings suggest that the perception of disorder is not as clear cut as once thought. Future research should explore what about these personal characteristics foster the perception of disorder when it is not present, as well as, how to fight disorder in neighborhoods when perception plays such a substantial role. === Dissertation/Thesis === M.S. Criminology and Criminal Justice 2013 |
author2 |
Scott, Christopher John (Author) |
author_facet |
Scott, Christopher John (Author) |
title |
An Experimental Approach Analyzing Who "Sees' Disorder When There is Nothing to "See": Understanding Variance of Perceptions via Personal Characteristics |
title_short |
An Experimental Approach Analyzing Who "Sees' Disorder When There is Nothing to "See": Understanding Variance of Perceptions via Personal Characteristics |
title_full |
An Experimental Approach Analyzing Who "Sees' Disorder When There is Nothing to "See": Understanding Variance of Perceptions via Personal Characteristics |
title_fullStr |
An Experimental Approach Analyzing Who "Sees' Disorder When There is Nothing to "See": Understanding Variance of Perceptions via Personal Characteristics |
title_full_unstemmed |
An Experimental Approach Analyzing Who "Sees' Disorder When There is Nothing to "See": Understanding Variance of Perceptions via Personal Characteristics |
title_sort |
experimental approach analyzing who "sees' disorder when there is nothing to "see": understanding variance of perceptions via personal characteristics |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18063 |
_version_ |
1718700127883886592 |