Worth the risk? Terrorism-induced fear of flying

  1. David J. Weiss 1
  2. Richard S. John 2
  3. Heather Rosoff 2
  4. Thomas Baumert 3
  5. Mikel Buesa 3
  6. Javier González Gómez 3
  7. Aurelia Valiño 3
  8. Tal Shavit 4
  9. Mosi Rosenboim 5
  1. 1 California State University, United State
  2. 2 University of Southern California, United State
  3. 3 Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
  4. 4 Open University, Israel
  5. 5 Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and Sapir Academic College, Israel
Aldizkaria:
Universitas psychologica

ISSN: 1657-9267

Argitalpen urtea: 2016

Alea: 15

Zenbakia: 3

Mota: Artikulua

DOI: 10.11144/JAVERIANA.UPSY15-3.WRTI DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openSarbide irekia editor

Beste argitalpen batzuk: Universitas psychologica

Laburpena

We conducted two bi-national experiments regarding emotional and behavioral responses to a terrorist plot against commercial flights, examining both feelings and projected action. The studies employed hypothetical scenarios in which terrorists attacked airplanes with shoulder-fired missiles as they were landing or taking off from an international airport. The scenarios were built around two factorially crossed manipulated variables, each with three levels: (1) government announcements or actions (2) social norm, expressed as variation in airline ticket sales. Each respondent read a questionnaire containing only one of the nine scenarios. Experiment 1 was conducted in Spain and California (n = 360, 50% female), Experiment 2 in Israel and California (n = 504, 50% female). In both studies, fear and flight plans were not differentially affected by governmental response or social norm. Women expressed more fear than men. Experiment 1 examined the purpose of the trip. Most respondents would not change a planned flight to attend a close friend’s wedding or important job interview, but a substantial number would postpone a vacation or drive to a different location. Experiment 2 featured escalating attacks. These yielded increased fear and more canceled trips. Within both studies, responses were similar across countries despite national differences in direct experience with terrorism.