Is the Effect of Trust on Risk Perceptions a Matter of Knowledge, Control, and Time? An Extension and Direct-Replication Attempt of Siegrist and Cvetkovich (2000)

Author:

Pauer Shiva12ORCID,Rutjens Bastiaan T.1,Brick Cameron13,Lob Aaron B.14ORCID,Buttlar Benjamin5,Noordewier Marret K.6,Schneider Iris K.7ORCID,van Harreveld Frenk18

Affiliation:

1. University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. Helmut Schmidt University, Hamburg, Germany

3. Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences, Innlandet, Norway

4. University of Zurich, Switzerland

5. University of Trier, Germany

6. Leiden University, The Netherlands

7. Technical University of Dresden, Germany

8. National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Bilthoven, The Netherlands

Abstract

The complexity of societal risks such as pandemics, artificial intelligence, and climate change may lead laypeople to rely on experts and authorities when evaluating these threats. While Siegrist and Cvetkovich showed that competence-based trust in authorities correlates with perceived societal risks and benefits only when people feel unknowledgeable, recent research has yielded mixed support for this foundational work. To address this discrepancy, we conducted a direct-replication study (preregistered; 1,070 participants, 33 risks, 35,310 observations). The results contradict the original findings. However, additional non-preregistered analyses indicate an alternative perspective aligning with compensatory control theory and the description-experience framework: experiences with insufficient personal control over a threat may amplify individuals’ dependency on powerful others for risk mitigation. These findings highlight the need to reevaluate how trust shapes risk perceptions. Recent societal and technological shifts might have heightened the desire for control compared to subjective knowledge in why people resort to trust.

Funder

Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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