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Economics of Environmental Risk Information Perception and Valuation

Can public information programs affect risk perceptions?

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Smith, VK; Desvousges, WH; Johnson, FR; Fisher, A
December 13, 2022

This article provides the first controlled evaluation of how different information materials explaining the risks from radon influenced people's perceptions of these risks. Using a panel study, it was possible to observe how stated risk perceptions responded to information about indoor radon concentrations and brochures explaining the radon readings. The findings indicate that risk communication policies can be effective in modifying risk perceptions. Moreover, they have three specific implications for radon policy: (1) Public officials should not adopt strategies that provide minimal risk information to the public as a means of avoiding undue alarm, for this can have the reverse effect; (2) measures of the effectiveness of risk communication will depend on how education and behavior change are defined; (3) categorical guidelines about risk without quantitative information can lead people to treat the levels as thresholds, creating an artificial discontinuity in their responses to small changes in risk perceptions.

Duke Scholars

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Publication Date

December 13, 2022

Start / End Page

182 / 200
 

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Smith, V. K., Desvousges, W. H., Johnson, F. R., & Fisher, A. (2022). Can public information programs affect risk perceptions? In Economics of Environmental Risk Information Perception and Valuation (pp. 182–200). https://doi.org/10.4337/9781035301614.00021
Smith, V. K., W. H. Desvousges, F. R. Johnson, and A. Fisher. “Can public information programs affect risk perceptions?” In Economics of Environmental Risk Information Perception and Valuation, 182–200, 2022. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781035301614.00021.
Smith VK, Desvousges WH, Johnson FR, Fisher A. Can public information programs affect risk perceptions? In: Economics of Environmental Risk Information Perception and Valuation. 2022. p. 182–200.
Smith, V. K., et al. “Can public information programs affect risk perceptions?Economics of Environmental Risk Information Perception and Valuation, 2022, pp. 182–200. Scopus, doi:10.4337/9781035301614.00021.
Smith VK, Desvousges WH, Johnson FR, Fisher A. Can public information programs affect risk perceptions? Economics of Environmental Risk Information Perception and Valuation. 2022. p. 182–200.

DOI

Publication Date

December 13, 2022

Start / End Page

182 / 200