Weinstein N D
Psychol Bull. 1989 Jan;105(1):31-50. doi: 10.1037/0033-2909.105.1.31.
This article seeks to further our understanding of self-protective behavior by examining the effects of a particularly powerful stimulus to action: personal experience. It reviews the effects of automobile accidents on seat belt use, criminal victimization other than rape on individual crime prevention efforts, natural hazards experience on both natural hazards preparedness and compliance with evacuation warnings, and myocardial infarction on smoking. Theories suggesting mechanisms that could link personal experience to behavior are described, and data concerning the effects of experience on some key variables in these theories are discussed. Tentative propositions are offered to resolve the many apparent discrepancies in this literature. These propositions concern the effects of experience on risk perceptions, the influence of experience on risk salience, the specificity of responses to victimization, and the duration of experience effects.
本文旨在通过研究一种特别强大的行动刺激因素——个人经历的影响,来进一步加深我们对自我保护行为的理解。它回顾了汽车事故对安全带使用的影响、除强奸之外的犯罪受害经历对个人预防犯罪努力的影响、自然灾害经历对自然灾害防范及遵守疏散警告的影响,以及心肌梗死对吸烟的影响。文中描述了一些表明个人经历与行为之间可能存在联系的机制的理论,并讨论了有关经历对这些理论中一些关键变量影响的数据。文中还提出了一些初步命题,以解决该文献中许多明显的矛盾之处。这些命题涉及经历对风险认知的影响、经历对风险显著性的影响、对受害经历反应的特异性,以及经历影响的持续时间。