Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
139120 Public Relations Review 2014 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•This study develops a multiple-item scale for measuring publics’ crisis emotions in organizational crises.•The three types of crisis emotions are: attribution-independent, external-attribution-dependent, and internal-attribution-dependent.•This scale provides a valid and reliable psychometric tool for researchers and crisis managers in an organizational crisis situation.

Although publics’ emotional responses have gained increasing importance in crisis communication research, reliable scales measuring crisis emotions specific to organizational crises are lacking. As the first study developing a multiple-item scale for measuring publics’ crisis emotions, this study examines the conceptualization and operationalization of attribution-independent crisis emotions versus attribution-dependent crisis emotions by employing two survey data sets (N = 490) for scale development and testing. Results indicate that three types of emotions are likely to be felt by publics when exposed to organizational crises: (1) attribution-independent (AI) crisis emotions; (2) external-attribution-dependent (EAD) crisis emotions; and (3) internal-attribution-dependent (IAD) crisis emotions. The scale's reliability, factorial structure, and validity are further assessed. The findings confirm that the underlying processes of publics’ emotions felt in crisis situations are different from those felt in non-crisis situations. Consequently, this scale provides a valid and reliable psychometric tool for researchers and crisis managers to measure publics’ different emotions that are relevant to a crisis situation, as a result of crisis attribution appraisal.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Marketing
Authors
, , , ,