
Ep 136: What is the symbolic purpose of injury rates?
Apr 29, 2026 - 00:44:14
Radio and PodcastLive Radio & Podcasts
From the perceived control in everyday activities like driving, to the dread associated with nuclear accidents, we discuss how emotional responses can sometimes skew our rational assessments of risk. Finally, we explore...
Ep. 123: Is risk a science or a feeling? is an episode from The Safety of Work by David Provan. From the perceived control in everyday activities like driving, to the dread associated with nuclear accidents, we discuss how emotional respons...
This episode belongs to The Safety of Work.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Aug 3, 2024, 00:59:21 long, audio available.
From the perceived control in everyday activities like driving, to the dread associated with nuclear accidents, we discuss how emotional responses can sometimes skew our rational assessments of risk. Finally, we explore the ethical and practical challenges of balancing emotional and analytical approaches in risk communication, especially in high-stakes scenarios like terrorism and public safety. The conversation touches on real-world examples, such as the aftermath of the September 11 attacks and the controversial discussions around gun ownership. We emphasize the importance of framing and narrative in conveying risk information effectively, ensuring that it resonates with and is clearly understood by diverse audiences. Discussion Points: Understanding risk perception, Paul Slovic's work and how it has shaped safety practices and decisions in everyday life “Affect heuristic” in decision making, influenced by emotions and past experiences, leading to inconsistencies in risk perception. Feeling in-control vs. “scary concepts”, risks are perceived differently due to emotions, control, and misunderstandings of probabilities, as seen in driving Risks are assessed differently based on probabilities, outcomes, framing, and context, influencing decision-making Other studies, looking at how people see risk, assessing your personal fear or risk from causes of death from cancer to stroke to car accidents to shark attacks vs. your own bathroom Balance between emotional and analytical risk evaluation Math and statistical examples of how risk is presented and perceived Post 9/11 terrorist fears vs. statistics Ethical considerations in communication, and challenges in conveying risk information Takeaways The answer to our episode’s question: “the short answer is both” Like and follow, send us your comments and suggestions! Quotes: “Risk is analysis where we bring logic, reason, and science or data or facts, and bring it to bear on hazard management.” - David “There may not be a perfect representation of any risk.” - Drew “If that's the important bit, then blow it up to the entire slide and get rid of the diagram and just show us the important bit.” - Drew “It's probably a bit unfair on humans to say that using feeling and emotion isn't a rational thing to do.” - David “The authors are almost saying here that for some types of risks and situations, risk as a feeling is great.” - David Resources: The Paper: Risk as Analysis and Risk as Feelings: Some thoughts about Affect, Reason, Risk and Rationality The Safety of Work Podcast The Safety of Work on LinkedIn Feedback@safetyofwork
You can listen to Ep. 123: Is risk a science or a feeling? online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Ep. 123: Is risk a science or a feeling? is an episode from The Safety of Work by David Provan.
This episode is 00:59:21 long.
This episode was published on Aug 3, 2024.
Yes. Use the heart button on the episode page to add it to your favorite episodes list.
Yes. This page shows related episodes from The Safety of Work when more episodes are available from the podcast feed.
You can listen to Ep. 123: Is risk a science or a feeling? on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Ep. 123: Is risk a science or a feeling? is from The Safety of Work by David Provan.
Published Aug 3, 2024 and 00:59:21 long