区分人们对辐射紧急情况的反应

Distinguishing Human Responses to Radiological Emergencies

Economic Geography · 1983
被引 29
人大 A-ABS 4

中文导读

研究发现,在核电站事故中,只有不到三分之一的家庭会遵循官方保护行动建议,多数人会过度反应或反应不足,距离感知和户主年龄是关键区分因素。

Abstract

Inherent in the revised emergency planning regulations recently issued by the federal government is the assumption that people will follow official protective action advisories during a nuclear reactor accident. In this paper the authors argue that this is an unrealistic assumption and present empirical evidence which supports the proposition that a radiological emergency in likely to give rise to a high degree of extreme public behavior. Their analyses indicate that less than one-third of the households on Long Island are likely to follow instructions in the event of an accident at the Shoreham Nuclear Power Station. Among the families who would not follow instructions, some would underreact but most would overreact. Perceived distance from the plant and age of household head appear to be the strongest discriminators among those who are most likely to follow orders, those most likely to underreact, and those most likely to overreact. Implications for radiological emergency preparedness and response planning are discussed. 71 references, 3 figures, 8 tables.

核辐射应急公众行为应急计划核电站事故