from these characteristics (25). Instead, as noted earlier, experts
appear to see riskiness as synonymous with expected annual mortality
(26). As a result, conflicts over "risk" may result from experts and
lay people having different definitions of the concept.
The representation shown in Fig. l, while robust and informative,
is by no means a universal cognitive mapping of the domain of
hazards. Other psychometric methods (such as multidimensional
scaling analysis of hazard similarity judgments), applied to quite
different sets of hazards, produce different spatial models (13, 18).
The utility of these models for rmderstanding and predicting
behavior remains to be determined.
from these characteristics (25). Instead, as noted earlier, expertsappear to see riskiness as synonymous with expected annual mortality(26). As a result, conflicts over "risk" may result from experts andlay people having different definitions of the concept.The representation shown in Fig. l, while robust and informative,is by no means a universal cognitive mapping of the domain ofhazards. Other psychometric methods (such as multidimensionalscaling analysis of hazard similarity judgments), applied to quitedifferent sets of hazards, produce different spatial models (13, 18).The utility of these models for rmderstanding and predictingbehavior remains to be determined.
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