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Invite colleaguesPersonality traits and thinking dispositions: Individual differences call for ‘smart’ messaging
Abstract
This paper reveals potentially innate psychological differences to explain differing responses to the same information that cannot be explained by personal circumstances, such as age, financial situation and physical constraints. The study examines three well-known cognitive, psychological constructs as measures of these innate differences: cognitive reflection, need for cognitive closure and psychological function preferences. The data reveal who innately: (1) makes the best decisions without full information; (2) is the most/least receptive to simple, instructive messages; and (3) is the most credible information intermediary. According to the findings, those who tend to make the best decisions under normal circumstances using uncertain or incomplete information may be the least receptive to the simple, instructive message approach frequently used in emergency preparedness. Furthermore, those who make the best information intermediaries are most likely a subset of this same group — those who respond well to an abundance of information and do not respond well to the concise directive. Nevertheless, once a deadline (or immediate crisis) approaches, people increase in their need to ‘decide something’, and generally all become more receptive to simple, instructive messages than they may be under normal circumstances (no immediate crisis).These findings are particularly important for business continuity and emergency management communications in promoting optimal emergency preparedness and response.
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Author's Biography
Lorilee A. Medders is Director, Florida Catastrophic Storm Risk Management Center, and Research Faculty III, Risk Management & Insurance, at Florida State University. She also chairs the Florida Commission on Hurricane Loss Projection Methodology. Dr Medders serves as 1st Vice President for the Southern Risk and Insurance Association, and on the board of directors for Sustainable Tallahassee and the American Association of Water Distribution and Management. She has a BSCB from the University of Alabama and a PhD in business administration (risk management, with a concentration in decision sciences & statistics) from Georgia State University.
Sarah K. Baisley is a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Psychology, Cognitive Affective Neuroscience Laboratory at Florida State University. During the development of this paper, she was Visiting Research Faculty I in the university’s Florida Catastrophic Storm Risk Management Center. Dr Baisley did her undergraduate work in psychology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, then earned a neuroscience PhD at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Citation
Medders, Lorilee A. and Baisley, Sarah K. (2017, June 1). Personality traits and thinking dispositions: Individual differences call for ‘smart’ messaging. In the Journal of Business Continuity & Emergency Planning, Volume 10, Issue 4. https://doi.org/10.69554/HEAA6072.Publications LLP