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Communicating Earthquake Preparedness: The Influence of Induced Mood, Perceived Risk, and Gain or Loss Frames on Homeowners’ Attitudes Toward General Precautionary Measures for Earthquakes

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TLDR
This study illustrates that specific interactions of mood, perceived risk, and frame type significantly affect homeowners' attitudes toward general precautionary measures for earthquakes, and emphasizes that carefully compiled communication measures are a powerful means to encourage precautionary attitudes among homeowners.
Abstract
Despite global efforts to reduce seismic risk, actual preparedness levels remain universally low. Although earthquake-resistant building design is the most efficient way to decrease potential losses, its application is not a legal requirement across all earthquake-prone countries and even if, often not strictly enforced. Risk communication encouraging homeowners to take precautionary measures is therefore an important means to enhance a country's earthquake resilience. Our study illustrates that specific interactions of mood, perceived risk, and frame type significantly affect homeowners' attitudes toward general precautionary measures for earthquakes. The interdependencies of the variables mood, risk information, and frame type were tested in an experimental 2 × 2 × 2 design (N = 156). Only in combination and not on their own, these variables effectively influence attitudes toward general precautionary measures for earthquakes. The control variables gender, "trait anxiety" index, and alteration of perceived risk adjust the effect. Overall, the group with the strongest attitudes toward general precautionary actions for earthquakes are homeowners with induced negative mood who process high-risk information and gain-framed messages. However, the conditions comprising induced negative mood, low-risk information and loss-frame and induced positive mood, low-risk information and gain-framed messages both also significantly influence homeowners' attitudes toward general precautionary measures for earthquakes. These results mostly confirm previous findings in the field of health communication. For practitioners, our study emphasizes that carefully compiled communication measures are a powerful means to encourage precautionary attitudes among homeowners, especially for those with an elevated perceived risk.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Can Emotions Capture the Elusive Gain-Loss Framing Effect? A Meta-Analysis:

TL;DR: In this paper, the affective dimension of gain and loss framing and its potent effect on framing effects was studied, and it was shown that emotions play a key role in generating framing effects.
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Disaster risk reduction: Psychological perspectives on preparedness

TL;DR: In this article, a discussion of the UNISDR strategy for disaster risk reduction is presented, which facilitates people's ability to anticipate, prepare for and recover from disaster is discussed.
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Time windows of opportunities to fight earthquake under-insurance: evidence from Google Trends

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore potential triggers and dynamic patterns of online interest in earthquake insurance at daily time-scale through the lens of Big Data and propose a methodology to move from a top-down conceptual approach to a bottom-up/data-enabled one.
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors affecting awareness of preparedness after moderate earthquakes: An analysis of the Pohang earthquake in Korea

TL;DR: In this paper, an online survey was conducted on a nationally representative sample of Korean adults after the moderate earthquake in Pohang in 2017, and statistical analyses were conducted to identify the determinants of willingness to pay (WTP) for seismic retrofitting and earthquake insurance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Message framing and self-conscious emotions help to understand pro-environment consumer purchase intention: an ERP study.

TL;DR: Event Rated Potentials technique helped to examine the neural mechanism of message framing effect on self-conscious emotions of pride and guilt regarding consumer purchase intention in the context of green marketing to deliver strong evidence that how purchase intention can be mediated by message framing under the Pride and guilt emotions in thecontext of green Marketing.
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