Publication | Closed Access
Seeking and Processing Information about Impersonal Risk
230
Citations
62
References
2006
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingInformation SecuritySocial PsychologyInformation SeekingLawInformation ForensicsSocial InfluenceConfidentialityCommunicationSelf-monitoringPsychologySocial SciencesRisk CommunicationRisk ResponseRisk-taking BehaviorRisk ManagementManagementRisk Response ModelPersonal DataProcessing InformationBehavioral SciencesInformation BehaviorTrustApplied Social PsychologySocial CognitionInterpersonal CommunicationAttribution TheorySocial Engineering (Security)Affect PerceptionPersuasionRisk DecisionsInformation Insufficiency
Attempts to model risk response tend to focus on risks that pose a direct personal threat. This study examined the applicability of one risk response model to impersonal risks—risks that threaten something other than the self, in this case, the environment. The study applied a section of the Griffin et al. risk‑information seeking and processing model, linking informational subjective norms to seeking and processing through perceived information insufficiency.
Attempts to model risk response tend to focus on risks that pose a direct personal threat. This study examined the applicability of one risk response model to impersonal risks—risks that threaten something other than the self, in this case, the environment. This study utilized a section of the Griffin et al. risk-information seeking and processing model, which depicts relationships between informational subjective norms and information seeking and processing as being mediated by perceptions of information insufficiency. The results indicate that while those relationships do hold for impersonal risk, informational subjective norms (perceived social pressure to be informed) may play an even more complex role than initially anticipated. These norms may be a powerful predictor of seeking and processing when individuals face impersonal risks.
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