Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
477929 European Journal of Operational Research 2016 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Managing major societal risks involves the need to understand public risk responses.•The social amplification of risk framework has been our main theoretical approach.•We explore how to model endogenised risk observation, behaviour and communication.•Agent simulation shows characteristic outcomes like peaks and drift in risk beliefs.•The model indicates the key areas where further empirical research is needed.

A characteristic aspect of risks in a complex, modern society is the nature and degree of the public response – sometimes significantly at variance with objective assessments of risk. A large part of the risk management task involves anticipating, explaining and reacting to this response. One of the main approaches we have for analysing the emergent public response, the social amplification of risk framework, has been the subject of little modelling. The purpose of this paper is to explore how social risk amplification can be represented and simulated. The importance of heterogeneity among risk perceivers, and the role of their social networks in shaping risk perceptions, makes it natural to take an agent-based approach. We look in particular at how to model some central aspects of many risk events: the way actors come to observe other actors more than external events in forming their risk perceptions; the way in which behaviour both follows risk perception and shapes it; and the way risk communications are fashioned in the light of responses to previous communications. We show how such aspects can be represented by availability cascades, but also how this creates further problems of how to represent the contrasting effects of informational and reputational elements, and the differentiation of private and public risk beliefs. Simulation of the resulting model shows how certain qualitative aspects of risk response time series found empirically – such as endogenously-produced peaks in risk concern – can be explained by this model.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
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