Risk Homeostasis
|
Read it and weep. |
|
Tradiban wrote: Read it and weep. Lacking a subscription, can I get the cliffs notes? |
|
Derek DeBruin wrote: Doh, sorry. This hits it just not as colorfully. https://injuryprevention.bmj.com/content/4/2/89 |
|
Nice. You are going to get people responding to this who can't differentiate the effect of a psychological response to a safety measure from the direct effect of the measure itself. I'm talking about the same folks who don't wear a seat belt because they want to be "thrown clear" of an accident or think they can "brace themselves" if only they have the unrestrained freedom of movement to do so. Same lot who think Bugs Bunny knows best about elevator safety. |
|
Who reads the New Yorker nowadays.....? |
|
master gumby wrote: Who reads the New Yorker nowadays.....? People who know what "climping" is. |
|
Summary: Honnold free solos because he's an atheist. |
|
The TLDR is that we all have an amount of negative outcomes we'll accept for a given activity due to risk, and regardless of what safety improvements are made to decrease this risk we'll change our behaviors to be more risky to achieve the same net outcome over time (Risk Homeostasis). |
|
Love this kind of stuff. Thanks Tradiban. |
|
Detrick Snyder wrote: Love this kind of stuff. Thanks Tradiban. Say what? He's run out of troll material so he's repackaging his same old stuff out of desperation. Like Hollywood turning 70s tv shows into movies cuz they can't think of anything new.......it's kind of sad. |
|
Jason Eberhard wrote: The TLDR is that we all have an amount of negative outcomes we'll accept for a given activity due to risk, and regardless of what safety improvements are made to decrease this risk we'll change our behaviors to be more risky to achieve the same net outcome over time (Risk Homeostasis). Bingo. To sum it up even more, do helmet wearing climbers engage in more risky decisions while climbing? |
|
Tradiban wrote: You should have opened with that...... ;) |
|
Conclusion: Rocky Mountain Rescue should charge exorbitantly for rescues |
|
While interesting, I would caution against applying conclusions derived from population-wide statistics to your own N=1 decision making. |
|
Instead of turning this towards the boring-as-hell to me argument about the behavior of people wearing helmets and seatbelts, I think there is an interesting philosopical point to make here about what drives people to climb in the first place, especially the more risky aspects of climbing like alpinism or free soloing. You occasionally hear people say things like "I'd totally be a hardcore drug addict if it weren't for climbing." Are some climbers just doomed to repeatedly take what objectively seem like stupid risks because our brains are wired in a way that predisposes those kind of choices, be them in climbing, what we eat, or interpersonal relationships? It seems morbid, but it's worth considering in my view. |
|
The stupidest and riskiest stuff I ever did was when I was least happy at work. I didn't realize it, but maybe the brain was calculating the expected cost (#4) of finding itself at work on Monday. |
|
The important takeaway, I believe, is that we should think about human psychology while climbing especially as a relates to risk. |
|
Being analytical and constantly evaluating risk has hindered my potential as a climber. |
|
Serge Smirnov wrote: The stupidest and riskiest stuff I ever did was when I was least happy at work. I didn't realize it, but maybe the brain was calculating the expected cost (#4) of finding itself at work on Monday. On a related note, the "post-break up free solo/risk binge" is a pretty well-documented phenomenon. Risk-taking as coping mechanism is definitely a thing, and again, as Tradiban mentions above, it's worth asking ourselves if we're doing dangerous stuff for the usual kinda unhealthy reasons or for unusually unhealthy reasons. |
|
If you want an apropos example of risk homeostasis, look into the current Boeing mess. |
|
Tradiban wrote: If you want an apropos example of risk homeostasis, look into the current Boeing mess. It is somewhat premature to draw conclusions to what happened, but "Boeing mess" does not appear to be an example of risk homeostasis - behavior that becomes riskier due to safeguards. From snippets of reporting of both 737 crashes it appears that Boeing took liberties with integration of sensor data into flawed control software, this was exacerbated by the fact that software implementation was not disclosed to pilots, as a result pilots lacked training to deal with this particular emergency. |