The 2018 California wildfires: examining sex differences in response to crisis communication and underlying processes

IF 0.7 Q3 COMMUNICATION Atlantic Journal of Communication Pub Date : 2023-02-07 DOI:10.1080/15456870.2023.2173363
Kenneth A. Lachlan, Christine Gilbert, Emily Hutter, Patric R. Spence
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Abstract

ABSTRACT A sizable body of research has explored information seeking processes during crises and disasters, including the ways in which people seek mediated information to help make sense of the event and take action. Much of this research has postulated that information seeking is used as a mechanism for stress reduction, and that sex differences exist in terms of information seeking and risk perceptions. The current study attempted to explicate these links in the context of the 2018 California wildfires. While evidence was found for differential patterns of information seeking across sex and degree of risk perception, evidence did not support the notion that aggregate information seeking leads to a reduction in stress. Alternative theoretical explanations for sex differences in crisis information seeking and stress responses are proposed and discussed, as are implications for crisis managers and emergency responders.
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2018年加州野火:探讨对危机沟通和潜在过程的反应中的性别差异
大量的研究探索了危机和灾难期间的信息寻求过程,包括人们寻求中介信息以帮助理解事件并采取行动的方式。大部分研究都假设信息寻求被用作减轻压力的一种机制,并且在信息寻求和风险感知方面存在性别差异。目前的研究试图在2018年加州野火的背景下解释这些联系。虽然有证据表明不同性别和风险感知程度的信息寻求模式存在差异,但证据并不支持汇总信息寻求导致压力减少的观点。提出并讨论了危机信息寻求和压力反应中性别差异的其他理论解释,以及对危机管理人员和应急响应者的影响。
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CiteScore
2.50
自引率
14.30%
发文量
32
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