Listen " Better Safe Than Sorry "
Episode Synopsis
Why does the click-through rate on threatening headlines far exceed those that are more benign? Calling something a threat through a provocative headline or soundbite initiates a biological reaction that almost compels a person to find out more, but why is that? Multnomah County, OR Chief Operating Officer Marissa Madrigal (Masters 1605/1606 aka 1611) explores how the process of securitization (declaring something is an external threat) initiates a neurobiological process that often causes people to adopt a ‘better safe than sorry’ posture when deciding what actions to take in response to the perceived threat. Her research found evidence that this behavior is having an impact on homeland security-related decisions by creating a bias toward compulsive precautionary behavior rather than clear-minded cognitive reassessment and that our predictable behavior can be used against us.
More episodes of the podcast The Reflecting Pool
Realizing Resilience
28/06/2022
Cyber Federalism
31/08/2021
Transnational Crime and Malicious AI
18/11/2020
Superforecasting: E Pluribus Analysis
20/08/2020
Law Enforcement's Role in Pandemics
16/04/2020
Information Laundering
06/05/2019
Unbounded Risk
07/02/2019
Future High: American drug policy in 2030
02/11/2018
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.