How Trust and Risk Perception Affect Household Water Use

R. Y. Wang, Xiaofeng Liu
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Abstract

Household water use accounts for an important portion of water consumption. Notably, different households may behave differently regarding how water is used in everyday life. Trust and risk perception are two significant psychological factors that influence water use behavior in households. Since trust and risk perception are malleable and subject to construction, they are useful for developing effective demand management strategies and water conservation policies. The concepts of trust and risk perception are multidimensional and interconnected. Risk perception varies across social groups and is often shaped by subjective feelings toward a variety of activities, events, and technologies. Risk perception is also mediated by trust, which involves a positive expectation of an individual, an organization, and/or an institution that derives from complex processes, characteristics, and competence. Likewise, different social groups’ trust in various entities involved in household water use is subject to the significant and far-reaching impact of risk perception. The complexity of the two notions poses challenges to the measurement and exploration of their effects on household water use. In many cases, risk perception and trust can influence people’s acceptance of water sources (e.g., tap water, bottled water, recycled water, and desalinated water) and their conservation behavior (e.g., installing water-saving technologies and reducing water consumption) in household water use. Trust can affect household water use indirectly through its influence on risk perception. Moreover, trust and risk perception in household water use are neither given nor fixed; rather, they are dynamically determined by external, internal, and informational factors. A coherent, stable, transparent, and fair social and institutional structure is conducive to building trust. However, trust and risk perception differ among groups with diverse household and/or individual demographic, economic, social, and cultural characteristics. Direct information from personal experiences and, more importantly, indirect information from one’s social network, as well as from mass media and social media, play an increasingly important role in the formation and evolution of trust and risk perception, bringing a profound impact on household water use in an era of information. Future directions lie in new dynamics of risk perception and trust in the era of information explosion, the coevolution mechanism of risk perception and trust in household water use, the nuanced impacts of different types of risks (e.g., controllable and uncontrollable) on household water use, and the interactive relations of risk perception and trust across geographical contexts.
信任和风险认知如何影响家庭用水
家庭用水占用水量的重要组成部分。值得注意的是,不同的家庭在日常生活中使用水的方式可能不同。信任和风险感知是影响家庭用水行为的两个重要心理因素。由于信任和风险认知是可塑的,并受建设的影响,它们对制定有效的需求管理战略和节水政策是有用的。信任和风险感知的概念是多维的,相互关联的。风险感知因社会群体而异,通常由对各种活动、事件和技术的主观感受所塑造。风险感知也受信任的影响,信任涉及对个人、组织和/或机构的积极期望,这种期望源于复杂的过程、特征和能力。同样,不同社会群体对参与家庭用水的各种实体的信任也受到风险感知的显著而深远的影响。这两个概念的复杂性对测量和探索它们对家庭用水的影响提出了挑战。在许多情况下,风险认知和信任可以影响人们对水源(如自来水、瓶装水、循环水和淡化水)的接受程度及其在家庭用水中的节约行为(如安装节水技术和减少用水量)。信任可以通过对风险认知的影响间接影响家庭用水。此外,对家庭用水的信任和风险认知既不是给定的,也不是固定的;相反,它们是由外部、内部和信息因素动态决定的。一个连贯、稳定、透明、公平的社会和制度结构有利于建立信任。然而,信任和风险感知在不同家庭和/或个人人口、经济、社会和文化特征的群体中是不同的。来自个人经历的直接信息,更重要的是来自社会网络的间接信息,以及来自大众媒体和社交媒体的间接信息,在信任和风险认知的形成和演变中发挥着越来越重要的作用,对信息时代的家庭用水产生了深远的影响。信息爆炸时代风险感知与信任的新动态、家庭用水风险感知与信任的协同演化机制、不同类型风险(如可控风险与不可控风险)对家庭用水的细微影响、跨地域风险感知与信任的互动关系是未来研究的方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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