Department of Psychology, University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.
Department of Computer and Information Science, University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.
Risk Anal. 2021 Nov;41(11):2016-2030. doi: 10.1111/risa.13706. Epub 2021 Feb 13.
Infectious diseases pose a serious threat to humans. Therefore, it is crucial to understand how accurately people perceive these risks. However, accuracy can be operationalized differently depending on the standard of comparison. The present study investigated accuracy in risk perceptions for three infectious diseases (avian influenza, seasonal influenza, common cold) using three different standards for accuracy: Social comparison (self vs. others' risk perceptions), general problem level (risk perceptions for diseases with varying threat levels), and dynamic problem level (risk perceptions during epidemics/seasons vs. nonepidemic/off-season times). Four online surveys were conducted using a repeated cross-sectional design. Two surveys were conducted during epidemics/seasons of avian influenza, seasonal influenza, and common cold in 2006 (n = 387) and 2016 (n = 370) and two surveys during nonepidemic/off-season times for the three diseases in 2009 (n = 792) during a swine flu outbreak and in 2018 (n = 422) during no outbreak of zoonotic influenza. While on average participants felt less at risk than others, indicating an optimistic bias, risk perceptions matched the magnitude of risk associated with the three infectious diseases. Importantly, a significant three-way interaction indicated dynamic accuracy in risk perceptions: Participants felt more at risk for seasonal influenza and common cold during influenza and cold seasons, compared with off-season times. However, these dynamic increases were more pronounced in the perceived risk for others than for oneself (optimistic bias). The results emphasize the importance of using multiple approaches to assess accuracy of risk perception as they provided different information on how accurately people gauge their risk when facing infectious diseases.
传染病对人类构成严重威胁。因此,了解人们对这些风险的感知程度至关重要。然而,准确性的操作性定义可能因比较标准而异。本研究使用三种不同的准确性标准(社会比较[自我与他人的风险感知比较]、一般问题水平[不同威胁水平疾病的风险感知]和动态问题水平[流行/季节期间与非流行/淡季期间的风险感知])来研究三种传染病(禽流感、季节性流感、普通感冒)的风险感知准确性。采用重复横断面设计进行了四项在线调查。在 2006 年(n=387)和 2016 年(n=370)禽流感、季节性流感和普通感冒流行/季节期间,以及在 2009 年(n=792)猪流感爆发期间和 2018 年(n=422)无动物流感爆发期间的非流行/淡季期间进行了两次调查。虽然平均而言,参与者感觉自己的风险低于他人,表明存在乐观偏见,但风险感知与三种传染病的风险程度相匹配。重要的是,显著的三向交互表明风险感知具有动态准确性:与淡季相比,参与者在流感和感冒季节期间对季节性流感和普通感冒的风险感知更高。然而,与自我感知相比,他人感知的这种动态增加更为明显(乐观偏见)。研究结果强调了使用多种方法评估风险感知准确性的重要性,因为它们提供了有关人们在面临传染病时如何准确评估自身风险的不同信息。