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Cultural cognition of risk

The cultural cognition of risk, sometimes called simply cultural cognition, is the hypothesized tendency to perceive risks and related facts in relation to personal values. Research examining this phenomenon draws on a variety of social science disciplines including psychology, anthropology, political science, sociology, and communications. The stated objectives of this research are both to understand how values shape political conflict over facts (like whether climate change exists, whether gun control increases crime, whether vaccination of school girls for HPV threatens their health) and to promote effective deliberative strategies for resolving such conflicts consistent with sound empirical data.

Theory and evidence edit

The cultural cognition hypothesis holds that individuals are motivated by a variety of psychological processes to form beliefs about putatively dangerous activities that match their cultural evaluations of them. Persons who subscribe to relatively individualistic values, for example, tend to value commerce and industry and are inclined to disbelieve that such activities pose serious environmental risks. Persons who subscribe to relatively egalitarian and communitarian values, in contrast, readily credit claims of environmental risks, which is consistent with their moral suspicion of commerce and industry as sources of inequality and symbols of excessive self-seeking.[1][2]

Scholars have furnished two types of evidence to support the cultural cognition hypothesis. The first consists of general survey data that suggest that individuals’ values more strongly predict their risk perceptions than do other characteristics such as race, gender, economic status, and political orientations.[3][4]

The second type of evidence consists in experiments that identify discrete psychological processes that connect individuals’ values to their beliefs about risk and related facts.[5] Such experiments suggest, for example, that individuals selectively credit or dismiss information in a manner that reinforces beliefs congenial to their values.[6] They also show that individuals tend to be more persuaded by policy experts perceived to hold values similar to their own rather than by ones perceived to hold values different from them.[7] Such processes, the experiments suggest, often result in divisive forms of cultural conflict over facts, but can also be managed in fashions that reduce such disagreement.[8]

Cultural cognition project at Yale Law School edit

Funded by governmental and private foundation grants,[when?] much of the work on cultural cognition has been performed by an interdisciplinary group of scholars affiliated with the Cultural Cognition Project.[9] There are currently[when?] over a dozen project members from a variety of universities. Two members of the project—Dan Kahan and Douglas Kysar—are Yale Law School faculty, although other members (such as Donald Braman of George Washington University Law School and Geoffrey Cohen of Stanford University) were previously affiliated with Yale Law School or Yale University. Students from Yale University also contribute to Project research.

Significant findings edit

Science comprehension and cultural polarization edit

A study conducted by Cultural Cognition Project researchers (using a nationally representative U.S. sample) found that ordinary members of the public do not become more concerned about climate change as their science comprehension increases.[10] However, the degree of polarization among cultural groups with opposing predispositions increases.

Nanotechnology edit

The Cultural Cognition Project has conducted a series of studies on public perceptions of nanotechnology risks and benefits. Combining survey and experimental methods, the studies present evidence that individuals culturally predisposed to be skeptical of environmental risks are both more likely to seek out information on nanotechnology and more likely to infer from that information that nanotechnology’s benefits will outweigh its risks. Individuals culturally predisposed to credit environmental risks construe that same information, when exposed to it in the lab, as implying that nanotechnology’s risks will predominate.[6] The studies also present evidence that individuals tend to credit expert information on nanotechnology—regardless of its content—based on whether they share the perceived cultural values of the expert communicator.[11] The studies were issued by the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, one of the research sponsors.

"Scientific consensus" edit

The same dynamics that motivate individuals of diverse cultural outlooks to form competing perceptions of risks are likely to cause them to form opposing perceptions of "scientific consensus", cultural cognition researchers have concluded.[12] In an experimental study, the researchers found that subjects were substantially more likely to count a scientist (of elite credentials) as an "expert" in his field of study when the scientist was depicted as taking a position consistent with the one associated with the subjects' cultural predispositions than when that scientist took a contrary position. A related survey showed that members of opposed cultural groups hold highly divergent impressions of what most scientific experts believe on various matters, a finding consistent with the ubiquity of culturally biased recognition of who counts as an "expert". Across a range of diverse risks (including climate change, nuclear waste disposal, and private handgun possession), members of no particular cultural group, the study found, were more likely than any other to hold perceptions of scientific consensus that consistently matched those adopted in "expert consensus reports" issued by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.

Law edit

Scholars have also applied the cultural cognition of risk to legal issues. One such study examined how individuals reacted to a videotape of a high-speed police chase. In Scott v. Harris,[13] the U.S. Supreme Court (by a vote of 8-1) had held that no reasonable jury could view the tape and fail to find that the driver posed a lethal risk to the public large enough to justify deadly force by the police (namely, ramming the fleeing driver's vehicle, causing it to crash). The majority of study subjects agreed with the Court, but there were significant divisions along cultural lines.[14] Other studies have found that individuals' cultural worldviews influence their perceptions of consent in an acquaintance or date rape scenario,[15] and of the imminence of violence and other facts in self-defense cases involving either battered women or interracial confrontations.[16]

Relationship to other risk perception theories edit

Cultural cognition is a descendant of two other theories of risk perception. The first is the cultural theory of risk associated with anthropologist Mary Douglas and political scientist Aaron Wildavsky.[17] The cultural cognition hypothesis is derived from Douglas and Wildavsky's claim, advanced most notably in their controversial book Risk and Culture: An Essay on the Selection of Technical and Environmental Dangers (1982), that individuals selectively attend to risks in a manner that expresses and reinforces their preferred way of life.[citation needed]

Cultural cognition researchers, along with other scholars who have investigated Douglas and Wildavsky's theory empirically,[18] use attitudinal scales that reflect Douglas's worldview typology. That typology characterizes worldviews, or preferences about how society should be organized, along two cross-cutting dimensions: "group", which refers to how individualistic or group-oriented a society should be; and "grid", which refers to how hierarchical or egalitarian a society should be.[19]

The second theory is the "psychometric paradigm", to which Paul Slovic, a member of the Cultural Cognition Project, has made significant contributions. The psychometric paradigm links risk perceptions to various cognitive and social mechanisms that generally evade simpler, rational choice models associated with economics.[20][21] Cultural cognition theory posits that these mechanisms mediate between, or connect, individuals' cultural values to their perceptions of risk and other policy-relevant beliefs.

Combining the cultural theory of risk and the psychometric paradigm, cultural cognition, its exponents claim, remedies difficulties with each.[22] The mechanisms featured in the psychometric paradigm (and in social psychology generally) furnish a cogent explanation of why individuals adopt states of mind that fit and promote the aims of groups, including ones featured in Douglas’s culture theory. They do so, moreover, in a manner that avoids "functionalism," a criticized form of analysis that identifies group interests, rather than individual ones, as a cause for human action.[23][24] At the same time cultural theory, by asserting the orienting role of values, explains how the mechanisms featured in the psychometric paradigm can result in differences in risk perception among persons who hold different values. The interrelationship between individual values and perceptions of risk also calls into doubt the depiction of risk perceptions deriving from these mechanisms as products of irrationality or cognitive defect.[25]

Criticisms edit

Cultural cognition has been subjected to criticisms from a variety of sources. The rational choice economists Fremling & Lott (2003), as well as the psychologist Sjöberg (1998) have suggested that the theory (and others based on the cultural theory of risk generally) explain only a small fraction of the variation in popular risk perceptions. Mary Douglas herself has criticized cultural cognition for a conception of values that is too tightly modeled on American political disputes and that implicitly disparages the "hierarchical" worldview.[26] Finally, some scholars who emphasize elements of the psychometric paradigm suggest that the influence of cultural values on risk perceptions is best understood as simply an additional source of interference with the rational processing of information.[27]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Kahan (2010a), p. 296.
  2. ^ Kahan et al. (2006), pp. 1083–84.
  3. ^ Kahan & Braman (2006), pp. 155–158.
  4. ^ Kahan et al. (2006), pp. 1086–87.
  5. ^ Kahan et al. (2007), p. ?.
  6. ^ a b Kahan et al. (2009), p. ?.
  7. ^ Kahan et al. (2010), p. ?.
  8. ^ Kahan (2007), p. 138-139.
  9. ^ "Home". culturalcognition.net.
  10. ^ Kahan et al. (2012), p. ?.
  11. ^ Kahan et al. (2008), pp. 5, 14.
  12. ^ Kahan, Jenkins-Smith & Braman (2010), p. 27.
  13. ^ 550 U.S. 372 (2007).
  14. ^ Kahan, Hoffman & Braman (2009), p. 837.
  15. ^ Kahan (2010b).
  16. ^ Kahan & Braman (2008).
  17. ^ Rayner (1992), p. ?.
  18. ^ For example, Dake (1991), Jenkins-Smith (2001), and Peters & Slovic (1996)
  19. ^ Rayner (1992), pp. 87–91.
  20. ^ Slovic (2000), p. ?.
  21. ^ Kahneman, Slovic & Tversky (1982), p. ?.
  22. ^ Kahan (2008), p. ?.
  23. ^ Boholm (1996), pp. 68, 79–80.
  24. ^ Kahan & Braman (2006), p. 252.
  25. ^ Kahan et al. (2006), pp. 1088–1106.
  26. ^ Douglas (2003).
  27. ^ Kahan et al. (2006).

References edit

  • Boholm, Åsa (1996), "Risk perception and social anthropology: critique of cultural theory", Ethnos, 68 (2): 159–178, doi:10.1080/0014184032000097722, S2CID 145127724
  • Dake, Karl (1991), "Orienting Dispositions in the Perception of Risk: An Analysis of Contemporary Worldviews and Cultural Biases", Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 22: 61–82, doi:10.1177/0022022191221006, S2CID 145367186
  • Douglas, Mary (2003), "Being Fair to Hierarchists", University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 151 (4): 1349–1370, doi:10.2307/3312933, JSTOR 3312933
  • Fremling, Gertrud M.; Lott, John R. (2003), "The Surprising Finding That "Cultural Worldviews" Don't Explain People's Views On Gun Control.", University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 151 (4): 1341–1348, doi:10.2307/3312932, JSTOR 3312932
  • Jenkins-Smith, Hank (2001), "Modeling Stigma: An Empirical Analysis of Nuclear Waste Images of Nevada.", in Flynn, James; Slovic, Paul; Kunreuther, Howard (eds.), Risk, Media, and Stigma, London; Sterling, VA: Earthscan., pp. 107–132
  • Kahan, Dan (2007), "The Cognitively Illiberal State", Stanford Law Review, 60: 115–154, SSRN 963929
  • Kahan, Dan (2008), "Cultural Cognition as a Conception of the Cultural Theory of Risk", Cultural Cognition Project Working Paper No. 73
  • Kahan, Dan; Slovic, Paul; Braman, Donald; Gastil, John; Cohen, Geoffrey; Kysar, Douglas (2008), Biased Assimilation, Polarization, and Cultural Credibility: An Experimental Study of Nanotechnology Risk Perceptions, Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies Research Brief
  • Kahan, Dan (2010a), "Fixing the Communications Failure", Nature, 463 (7279): 296–297, Bibcode:2010Natur.463..296K, doi:10.1038/463296a, PMID 20090734, S2CID 205052651
  • Kahan, Dan (2010b), "Culture, Cognition, and Consent: Who Perceives What, and Why, in Acquaintance Rape Cases", University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 158: 729–812, SSRN 1437742
  • Kahan, Dan; Braman, Donald (2006), "Cultural Cognition of Public Policy", Yale Journal of Law and Public Policy, 24: 147–170, SSRN 746508
  • Kahan, Dan; Braman, Donald (2008), "The Self-defensive Cognition of Self-defense", American Criminal Law Review, 45 (1): 1–65, SSRN 1012967
  • Kahan, Dan; Braman, Donald; Slovic, Paul; Gastil, John; Cohen, Geoffrey (2007), The Second National Risk and Culture Study: Making Sense of–and Making Progress in–the American Culture War of Fact, Harvard Law School Program on Risk Regulation Research Paper, vol. 08–26, hdl:1794/22049, SSRN 1017189
  • Kahan, Dan; Braman, Donald; Cohen, Geoffrey; Slovic, Paul; Gastil, John (2010), "Who Fears the HPV Vaccine, Who Doesn't, and Why: An Experimental Study of the Mechanisms of Cultural Cognition", Law and Human Behavior, 34 (6): 501–516, doi:10.1007/s10979-009-9201-0, PMID 20076997, S2CID 28108691, SSRN 1160654
  • Kahan, Dan; Hoffman, D.A.; Braman, Donald (2009), "Whose Eyes are You Going to Believe? Scott v. Harris and the Perils of Cognitive Illiberalism", Harvard Law Review, 122 (3): 837–906
  • Kahan, Dan; Jenkins-Smith, Hank; Braman, Donald (2010), "Cultural Cognition of Scientific Consensus", Journal of Risk Research, 14 (2): 147–174, doi:10.1080/13669877.2010.511246, hdl:10.1080/13669877.2010.511246, S2CID 216092368, SSRN 1549444
  • Kahan, Dan; Peters, Ellen; Wittlin, Maggie; Slovic, Paul; Ouellette, Lisa Larrimore; Braman, Donald; Mandel, Gregory (2012), "The polarizing impact of science literacy and numeracy on perceived climate change risks", Nature Climate Change, 2 (10): 732–735, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.709.2300, doi:10.1038/nclimate1547, S2CID 53631207
  • Kahan, Dan; Slovic, Paul; Braman, Donald; Cohen, Geoffrey; Gastil, John (2009), "Cultural Cognition of the Risks and Benefits of Nanotechnology", Nature Nanotechnology, 4 (2): 87–90, Bibcode:2009NatNa...4...87K, doi:10.1038/nnano.2008.341, PMID 19197308
  • Kahan, Dan; Slovic, Paul; Braman, Donald; Gastil, John (2006), "Fear of Democracy: A Cultural Critique of Sunstein on Risk", Harvard Law Review, 119: 1071–1109
  • Kahneman, Daniel; Slovic, Paul; Tversky, Amos (1982), "Judgment Under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases", Science, 185 (4157), Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press: 1124–31, doi:10.1126/science.185.4157.1124, PMID 17835457, S2CID 143452957
  • Peters, Ellen; Slovic, Paul (1996), "The Role of Affect and Worldviews as Orienting Dispositions in the Perception and Acceptance of Nuclear Power", Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 26 (16): 1427–1453, doi:10.1111/j.1559-1816.1996.tb00079.x, hdl:1794/22509
  • Rayner, Steve (1992), "Cultural Theory and Risk Analysis.", in Krimsky, Sheldon; Golding, Dominic (eds.), Social Theories of Risk, Westport, Conn: Praeger, pp. 83–115
  • Sjöberg, Lennart (1998), "World Views, Political Attitudes, and Risk Perception", Risk: Health, Safety and Environment, 9: 137–152
  • Slovic, Paul (2000), The Perception of Risk, London: Sterling, VA: Earthscan Publications
  • Sunsein, CR (2006), (PDF), Harvard Law Review, 119 (4): 110–1125, archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-19, retrieved 2011-08-17
  • Sunsein, CR (2006), "On the Divergence of American Reactions to Terrorism and Climate Change", John M. Olin Law and Economics Working Paper, 295

Further reading edit

  • Bailey, R. The Culture War on Facts: Are You Entitled to Your Own Truth? Reasonline, Oct. 9, 2007.
  • Bailey, R. Everyone Who Knows What They're Talking About Agrees with Me Reasonline, Feb. 23, 2010.
  • Bond, M. How to Keep Your Head in Scary Situations. New Scientist, Aug. 27, 2008.
  • DiMaggio, P (1997). "Culture and Cognition". Annual Review of Sociology. 23: 263–287. doi:10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.263.
  • Douglas, Mary., & Wildavsky, A. B. (1982). Risk and Culture : An Essay on the Selection of Technical and Environmental Dangers. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Finucane, M.; Slovic, P.; Mertz, C. K.; Flynn, J.; Satterfield, T. A. (2000). "Gender, Race, and Perceived Risk: The "White Male" Effect". Health, Risk & Society. 3 (2): 159–172. doi:10.1080/713670162. S2CID 73116784.
  • Flynn, J.; Slovic, P.; Mertz, C. K. (1994). "Gender, Race, and Perception of Environmental Health Risk". Risk Analysis. 14 (6): 1101–1108. doi:10.1111/j.1539-6924.1994.tb00082.x. hdl:1794/22417. PMID 7846319.
  • Jones, R. Fearing the Fear of Nanotechnology. Nature News, Dec. 9, 2008.
  • Joyce, C. Belief In Climate Change Hinges On Worldview. NPR: All Things Considered, Feb. 23, 2010.
  • Kahan, D., Braman, D., Gastil, J., Slovic, P., & Mertz, C. K. (2007). Culture and Identity-Protective Cognition: Explaining the White-Male Effect in Risk Perception. Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, 4(3), 465-505.
  • National Science Foundation. New Studies Reveal Differing Perceptions of Nature-Altering Science, Dec. 11, 2008.
  • National Science Foundation. Why "Scientific Consensus" Fails to Persuade, Sept. 13, 2010.
  • Palmer, C. (2003). Risk Perception: Another Look at the "White Male Effect." Health, Risk
  • Shea, Christopher. The Ninth Annual Year in Ideas: Cognitive Illiberalism. N.Y. Times Sunday Magazine, Dec. 10, 2009.
  • Vedantam, Shankar. Why Voters Play Follow-the-Leader. Washington Post, Feb. 4, 2008, A3.
  • Weber, Bruce. The Deciders: Umpires v. Judges, New York Times, July 12, 2009, WK1.

External links edit

  • Cultural Cognition Project website
  • Public Lecture on Cultural Cognition by Dan Kahan, University of Florida, Oct. 6, 2009

cultural, cognition, risk, cultural, cognition, risk, sometimes, called, simply, cultural, cognition, hypothesized, tendency, perceive, risks, related, facts, relation, personal, values, research, examining, this, phenomenon, draws, variety, social, science, d. The cultural cognition of risk sometimes called simply cultural cognition is the hypothesized tendency to perceive risks and related facts in relation to personal values Research examining this phenomenon draws on a variety of social science disciplines including psychology anthropology political science sociology and communications The stated objectives of this research are both to understand how values shape political conflict over facts like whether climate change exists whether gun control increases crime whether vaccination of school girls for HPV threatens their health and to promote effective deliberative strategies for resolving such conflicts consistent with sound empirical data Contents 1 Theory and evidence 2 Cultural cognition project at Yale Law School 3 Significant findings 3 1 Science comprehension and cultural polarization 3 2 Nanotechnology 3 3 Scientific consensus 3 4 Law 4 Relationship to other risk perception theories 5 Criticisms 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksTheory and evidence editThe cultural cognition hypothesis holds that individuals are motivated by a variety of psychological processes to form beliefs about putatively dangerous activities that match their cultural evaluations of them Persons who subscribe to relatively individualistic values for example tend to value commerce and industry and are inclined to disbelieve that such activities pose serious environmental risks Persons who subscribe to relatively egalitarian and communitarian values in contrast readily credit claims of environmental risks which is consistent with their moral suspicion of commerce and industry as sources of inequality and symbols of excessive self seeking 1 2 Scholars have furnished two types of evidence to support the cultural cognition hypothesis The first consists of general survey data that suggest that individuals values more strongly predict their risk perceptions than do other characteristics such as race gender economic status and political orientations 3 4 The second type of evidence consists in experiments that identify discrete psychological processes that connect individuals values to their beliefs about risk and related facts 5 Such experiments suggest for example that individuals selectively credit or dismiss information in a manner that reinforces beliefs congenial to their values 6 They also show that individuals tend to be more persuaded by policy experts perceived to hold values similar to their own rather than by ones perceived to hold values different from them 7 Such processes the experiments suggest often result in divisive forms of cultural conflict over facts but can also be managed in fashions that reduce such disagreement 8 Cultural cognition project at Yale Law School editFunded by governmental and private foundation grants when much of the work on cultural cognition has been performed by an interdisciplinary group of scholars affiliated with the Cultural Cognition Project 9 There are currently when over a dozen project members from a variety of universities Two members of the project Dan Kahan and Douglas Kysar are Yale Law School faculty although other members such as Donald Braman of George Washington University Law School and Geoffrey Cohen of Stanford University were previously affiliated with Yale Law School or Yale University Students from Yale University also contribute to Project research Significant findings editScience comprehension and cultural polarization edit A study conducted by Cultural Cognition Project researchers using a nationally representative U S sample found that ordinary members of the public do not become more concerned about climate change as their science comprehension increases 10 However the degree of polarization among cultural groups with opposing predispositions increases Nanotechnology edit The Cultural Cognition Project has conducted a series of studies on public perceptions of nanotechnology risks and benefits Combining survey and experimental methods the studies present evidence that individuals culturally predisposed to be skeptical of environmental risks are both more likely to seek out information on nanotechnology and more likely to infer from that information that nanotechnology s benefits will outweigh its risks Individuals culturally predisposed to credit environmental risks construe that same information when exposed to it in the lab as implying that nanotechnology s risks will predominate 6 The studies also present evidence that individuals tend to credit expert information on nanotechnology regardless of its content based on whether they share the perceived cultural values of the expert communicator 11 The studies were issued by the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars one of the research sponsors Scientific consensus edit The same dynamics that motivate individuals of diverse cultural outlooks to form competing perceptions of risks are likely to cause them to form opposing perceptions of scientific consensus cultural cognition researchers have concluded 12 In an experimental study the researchers found that subjects were substantially more likely to count a scientist of elite credentials as an expert in his field of study when the scientist was depicted as taking a position consistent with the one associated with the subjects cultural predispositions than when that scientist took a contrary position A related survey showed that members of opposed cultural groups hold highly divergent impressions of what most scientific experts believe on various matters a finding consistent with the ubiquity of culturally biased recognition of who counts as an expert Across a range of diverse risks including climate change nuclear waste disposal and private handgun possession members of no particular cultural group the study found were more likely than any other to hold perceptions of scientific consensus that consistently matched those adopted in expert consensus reports issued by the U S National Academy of Sciences Law edit Scholars have also applied the cultural cognition of risk to legal issues One such study examined how individuals reacted to a videotape of a high speed police chase In Scott v Harris 13 the U S Supreme Court by a vote of 8 1 had held that no reasonable jury could view the tape and fail to find that the driver posed a lethal risk to the public large enough to justify deadly force by the police namely ramming the fleeing driver s vehicle causing it to crash The majority of study subjects agreed with the Court but there were significant divisions along cultural lines 14 Other studies have found that individuals cultural worldviews influence their perceptions of consent in an acquaintance or date rape scenario 15 and of the imminence of violence and other facts in self defense cases involving either battered women or interracial confrontations 16 Relationship to other risk perception theories editCultural cognition is a descendant of two other theories of risk perception The first is the cultural theory of risk associated with anthropologist Mary Douglas and political scientist Aaron Wildavsky 17 The cultural cognition hypothesis is derived from Douglas and Wildavsky s claim advanced most notably in their controversial book Risk and Culture An Essay on the Selection of Technical and Environmental Dangers 1982 that individuals selectively attend to risks in a manner that expresses and reinforces their preferred way of life citation needed Cultural cognition researchers along with other scholars who have investigated Douglas and Wildavsky s theory empirically 18 use attitudinal scales that reflect Douglas s worldview typology That typology characterizes worldviews or preferences about how society should be organized along two cross cutting dimensions group which refers to how individualistic or group oriented a society should be and grid which refers to how hierarchical or egalitarian a society should be 19 The second theory is the psychometric paradigm to which Paul Slovic a member of the Cultural Cognition Project has made significant contributions The psychometric paradigm links risk perceptions to various cognitive and social mechanisms that generally evade simpler rational choice models associated with economics 20 21 Cultural cognition theory posits that these mechanisms mediate between or connect individuals cultural values to their perceptions of risk and other policy relevant beliefs Combining the cultural theory of risk and the psychometric paradigm cultural cognition its exponents claim remedies difficulties with each 22 The mechanisms featured in the psychometric paradigm and in social psychology generally furnish a cogent explanation of why individuals adopt states of mind that fit and promote the aims of groups including ones featured in Douglas s culture theory They do so moreover in a manner that avoids functionalism a criticized form of analysis that identifies group interests rather than individual ones as a cause for human action 23 24 At the same time cultural theory by asserting the orienting role of values explains how the mechanisms featured in the psychometric paradigm can result in differences in risk perception among persons who hold different values The interrelationship between individual values and perceptions of risk also calls into doubt the depiction of risk perceptions deriving from these mechanisms as products of irrationality or cognitive defect 25 Criticisms editCultural cognition has been subjected to criticisms from a variety of sources The rational choice economists Fremling amp Lott 2003 as well as the psychologist Sjoberg 1998 have suggested that the theory and others based on the cultural theory of risk generally explain only a small fraction of the variation in popular risk perceptions Mary Douglas herself has criticized cultural cognition for a conception of values that is too tightly modeled on American political disputes and that implicitly disparages the hierarchical worldview 26 Finally some scholars who emphasize elements of the psychometric paradigm suggest that the influence of cultural values on risk perceptions is best understood as simply an additional source of interference with the rational processing of information 27 See also editCognitive biases Cognitive dissonance Cultural bias Cultural theory of risk Information deficit model Outrage factorNotes edit Kahan 2010a p 296 Kahan et al 2006 pp 1083 84 Kahan amp Braman 2006 pp 155 158 Kahan et al 2006 pp 1086 87 Kahan et al 2007 p a b Kahan et al 2009 p Kahan et al 2010 p Kahan 2007 p 138 139 Home culturalcognition net Kahan et al 2012 p Kahan et al 2008 pp 5 14 Kahan Jenkins Smith amp Braman 2010 p 27 550 U S 372 2007 Kahan Hoffman amp Braman 2009 p 837 Kahan 2010b Kahan amp Braman 2008 Rayner 1992 p For example Dake 1991 Jenkins Smith 2001 and Peters amp Slovic 1996 Rayner 1992 pp 87 91 Slovic 2000 p Kahneman Slovic amp Tversky 1982 p Kahan 2008 p Boholm 1996 pp 68 79 80 Kahan amp Braman 2006 p 252 Kahan et al 2006 pp 1088 1106 Douglas 2003 Kahan et al 2006 References editBoholm Asa 1996 Risk perception and social anthropology critique of cultural theory Ethnos 68 2 159 178 doi 10 1080 0014184032000097722 S2CID 145127724 Dake Karl 1991 Orienting Dispositions in the Perception of Risk An Analysis of Contemporary Worldviews and Cultural Biases Journal of Cross Cultural Psychology 22 61 82 doi 10 1177 0022022191221006 S2CID 145367186 Douglas Mary 2003 Being Fair to Hierarchists University of Pennsylvania Law Review 151 4 1349 1370 doi 10 2307 3312933 JSTOR 3312933 Fremling Gertrud M Lott John R 2003 The Surprising Finding That Cultural Worldviews Don t Explain People s Views On Gun Control University of Pennsylvania Law Review 151 4 1341 1348 doi 10 2307 3312932 JSTOR 3312932 Jenkins Smith Hank 2001 Modeling Stigma An Empirical Analysis of Nuclear Waste Images of Nevada in Flynn James Slovic Paul Kunreuther Howard eds Risk Media and Stigma London Sterling VA Earthscan pp 107 132 Kahan Dan 2007 The Cognitively Illiberal State Stanford Law Review 60 115 154 SSRN 963929 Kahan Dan 2008 Cultural Cognition as a Conception of the Cultural Theory of Risk Cultural Cognition Project Working Paper No 73 Kahan Dan Slovic Paul Braman Donald Gastil John Cohen Geoffrey Kysar Douglas 2008 Biased Assimilation Polarization and Cultural Credibility An Experimental Study of Nanotechnology Risk Perceptions Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies Research Brief Kahan Dan 2010a Fixing the Communications Failure Nature 463 7279 296 297 Bibcode 2010Natur 463 296K doi 10 1038 463296a PMID 20090734 S2CID 205052651 Kahan Dan 2010b Culture Cognition and Consent Who Perceives What and Why in Acquaintance Rape Cases University of Pennsylvania Law Review 158 729 812 SSRN 1437742 Kahan Dan Braman Donald 2006 Cultural Cognition of Public Policy Yale Journal of Law and Public Policy 24 147 170 SSRN 746508 Kahan Dan Braman Donald 2008 The Self defensive Cognition of Self defense American Criminal Law Review 45 1 1 65 SSRN 1012967 Kahan Dan Braman Donald Slovic Paul Gastil John Cohen Geoffrey 2007 The Second National Risk and Culture Study Making Sense of and Making Progress in the American Culture War of Fact Harvard Law School Program on Risk Regulation Research Paper vol 08 26 hdl 1794 22049 SSRN 1017189 Kahan Dan Braman Donald Cohen Geoffrey Slovic Paul Gastil John 2010 Who Fears the HPV Vaccine Who Doesn t and Why An Experimental Study of the Mechanisms of Cultural Cognition Law and Human Behavior 34 6 501 516 doi 10 1007 s10979 009 9201 0 PMID 20076997 S2CID 28108691 SSRN 1160654 Kahan Dan Hoffman D A Braman Donald 2009 Whose Eyes are You Going to Believe Scott v Harris and the Perils of Cognitive Illiberalism Harvard Law Review 122 3 837 906 Kahan Dan Jenkins Smith Hank Braman Donald 2010 Cultural Cognition of Scientific Consensus Journal of Risk Research 14 2 147 174 doi 10 1080 13669877 2010 511246 hdl 10 1080 13669877 2010 511246 S2CID 216092368 SSRN 1549444 Kahan Dan Peters Ellen Wittlin Maggie Slovic Paul Ouellette Lisa Larrimore Braman Donald Mandel Gregory 2012 The polarizing impact of science literacy and numeracy on perceived climate change risks Nature Climate Change 2 10 732 735 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 709 2300 doi 10 1038 nclimate1547 S2CID 53631207 Kahan Dan Slovic Paul Braman Donald Cohen Geoffrey Gastil John 2009 Cultural Cognition of the Risks and Benefits of Nanotechnology Nature Nanotechnology 4 2 87 90 Bibcode 2009NatNa 4 87K doi 10 1038 nnano 2008 341 PMID 19197308 Kahan Dan Slovic Paul Braman Donald Gastil John 2006 Fear of Democracy A Cultural Critique of Sunstein on Risk Harvard Law Review 119 1071 1109 Kahneman Daniel Slovic Paul Tversky Amos 1982 Judgment Under Uncertainty Heuristics and Biases Science 185 4157 Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press 1124 31 doi 10 1126 science 185 4157 1124 PMID 17835457 S2CID 143452957 Peters Ellen Slovic Paul 1996 The Role of Affect and Worldviews as Orienting Dispositions in the Perception and Acceptance of Nuclear Power Journal of Applied Social Psychology 26 16 1427 1453 doi 10 1111 j 1559 1816 1996 tb00079 x hdl 1794 22509 Rayner Steve 1992 Cultural Theory and Risk Analysis in Krimsky Sheldon Golding Dominic eds Social Theories of Risk Westport Conn Praeger pp 83 115 Sjoberg Lennart 1998 World Views Political Attitudes and Risk Perception Risk Health Safety and Environment 9 137 152 Slovic Paul 2000 The Perception of Risk London Sterling VA Earthscan Publications Sunsein CR 2006 Misfearing A Reply PDF Harvard Law Review 119 4 110 1125 archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 19 retrieved 2011 08 17 Sunsein CR 2006 On the Divergence of American Reactions to Terrorism and Climate Change John M Olin Law and Economics Working Paper 295Further reading editBailey R The Culture War on Facts Are You Entitled to Your Own Truth Reasonline Oct 9 2007 Bailey R Everyone Who Knows What They re Talking About Agrees with Me Reasonline Feb 23 2010 Bond M How to Keep Your Head in Scary Situations New Scientist Aug 27 2008 DiMaggio P 1997 Culture and Cognition Annual Review of Sociology 23 263 287 doi 10 1146 annurev soc 23 1 263 Douglas Mary amp Wildavsky A B 1982 Risk and Culture An Essay on the Selection of Technical and Environmental Dangers Berkeley University of California Press Finucane M Slovic P Mertz C K Flynn J Satterfield T A 2000 Gender Race and Perceived Risk The White Male Effect Health Risk amp Society 3 2 159 172 doi 10 1080 713670162 S2CID 73116784 Flynn J Slovic P Mertz C K 1994 Gender Race and Perception of Environmental Health Risk Risk Analysis 14 6 1101 1108 doi 10 1111 j 1539 6924 1994 tb00082 x hdl 1794 22417 PMID 7846319 Jones R Fearing the Fear of Nanotechnology Nature News Dec 9 2008 Joyce C Belief In Climate Change Hinges On Worldview NPR All Things Considered Feb 23 2010 Kahan D Braman D Gastil J Slovic P amp Mertz C K 2007 Culture and Identity Protective Cognition Explaining the White Male Effect in Risk Perception Journal of Empirical Legal Studies 4 3 465 505 National Science Foundation New Studies Reveal Differing Perceptions of Nature Altering Science Dec 11 2008 National Science Foundation Why Scientific Consensus Fails to Persuade Sept 13 2010 Palmer C 2003 Risk Perception Another Look at the White Male Effect Health Risk Shea Christopher The Ninth Annual Year in Ideas Cognitive Illiberalism N Y Times Sunday Magazine Dec 10 2009 Vedantam Shankar Why Voters Play Follow the Leader Washington Post Feb 4 2008 A3 Weber Bruce The Deciders Umpires v Judges New York Times July 12 2009 WK1 External links editCultural Cognition Project website Public Lecture on Cultural Cognition by Dan Kahan University of Florida Oct 6 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cultural cognition of risk amp oldid 1212200954, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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