The short-term probability calculation is an interesting consideration.

However, the relative risk of air travel compared to travel by
automobile is consistently in favor of air travel as the safer option.

Nevertheless, people consistently prefer travel by car as the "safer"
option.

Much of this fear is driven by ease of retrieving examples of fatalities
in air crashes and overweighting this risk.

Fatalities in auto crashes are mundane, not covered well in the media,
and their risk is underestimated.

 

911 enhanced the ease of retrieval of air crashes with fatalities (and
may have marginally increased the "real" risk of air travel).

 

I doubt that the safe "soft crash" of an airplane in the Hudson River
with zero fatalities did anything to reduce this overestimation of the
risk of air travel. But that is an empirical question. Anybody working
on it?  J

 

Claudia J. Stanny, Ph.D.                      

Director, Center for University Teaching, Learning, and Assessment

Associate Professor, Psychology                                        

University of West Florida

Pensacola, FL  32514 - 5751

 

Phone:   (850) 857-6355 or  473-7435

e-mail:        [email protected]

 

CUTLA Web Site: http://uwf.edu/cutla/

Personal Web Pages: http://uwf.edu/cstanny/website/index.htm

 

From: Maxwell Gwynn [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, March 25, 2009 2:38 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] Rick Steves: Travel guru reports on a little
psychology

 

 

 

I'm not an expert on Risk Assessment, but it would seem to me that when
people were considering the riskiness of traveling by car versus by air,
they would have been likely to consider that (after September 11) there
had recently been four commercial flights in which all passengers had
been killed. The NSC data would not have included this information in
their data base.

 

I don't think that the possibility/probability of further terrorist
hijackings would be independent of the incidence of recent terrorist
hijackings, and so wouldn't people be making a conditional risk
calculation? That is, the comparison would not be Probability of dying
in a car crash versus Probability of dying in a plane crash (37:1), but
rather Probability of dying in a car crash in the next few days of
traveling versus Probability of dying in a plane crash in the next few
days of traveling given that there had been recent terrorist hijackings
of commercial flights (??:1). 

 

What I'm getting at is that the increase in car travel was not
necessarily all a result of the "dread risk" phenomenon, but also
included some novel calculations of relative risks based on reality
rather than overreaction.

 

-Max

 

 

Maxwell Gwynn, PhD
Psychology Department
Wilfrid Laurier University
519-884-0710 ext 3854
[email protected]

>>> "Frantz, Sue" [email protected]> 3/25/2009 11:51 AM >>
<mailto:[email protected]%3e%203/25/2009%2011:51%20AM%20%3e%3e> 


 


Bungled Risk Assessment and Tragic Road Trips
<http://www.ricksteves.com/blog/index.cfm?fuseaction=entry&entryID=333>



 Fearing dying in a terrorist airplane crash because the September 11
events were so prominent in our memories, we reduced our air travel and
increased our automobile travel, leading to a significantly great number
of fatal traffic accidents than usual. It is estimated that about 1,600
more people needlessly died in these traffic accidents (Gigerenzer,
2006). These lives could have been saved had we not reacted to the dread
risk as we did. We just do not seem to realize that it is far safer to
fly than to drive. National Safety Council data reveal that you are 37
times more likely to die in a vehicle accident than on a commercial
flight." 

-

 

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