mercredi 18 mai 2016

Fear response testing - when would you act?

Hello all

We are doing some research on fear response testing and we are interested in getting some feedback on the specific types of information, triggers or events that would prompt people to take action rather than sit and wait for further information.

Our company (Benchmarking Assessment Group) provides psychological testing for a wide range of client organisations in Europe and Asia, and also conduct original research on psychological assessment, occupational and clinical measurement, and related statistical methods.

We are the authors of this video but do feel free to use and share freely. We trust that this post is useful in the context of getting people to think and to maintain awareness about disaster responsiveness, but we will take the post down if people consider it inappropriate for this forum.

We have created a video that simulates a live TV broadcast (albeit for the United Kingdom) showing an escalating conflict between NATO and Russian Forces, providing hints of the possible seriousness of the situation at different stages.

The question is at what stage people would be prompted to bug out, what specifically stimulated the 'bug out' versus 'wait and see' reaction in real time, and to what extent your contextual understanding of world events influenced you rather than just what appears on the screen.

Our interest therefore is in the decision-making part of this rather than what action you would in fact take (although do share this too, it's interesting). The most useful (and measurable) feedback would be the actual time into the video that you would bug out, and perhaps some notes as to why. We hope to share the results back to the forum once we have a decent sample size.

Nuclear Attack Live News Broadcast

We are considering doing this with a US broadcast scenario, but for the moment please just use your imagination and envisage a situation where you were seeing this on CNN or Fox News, etc.

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Fear response testing - when would you act?

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