This study examines the rationality of safety beliefs and the correlation between risk perception and actual level of job-related physical risk using data from the Maine’s American lobster fishery. To avoid measurement errors, I applied the instrumental variables to estimate risk perception and the compensation for the captain. Using educational achievement as a proxy for cognitive ability, I find no evidence supporting a correlation between risk perception and cognitive ability. While captains incorporate information on actual commercial fishing accidents to form their probabilistic judgments, I find evidence that the learning process is non-linear in lobster fishery and does not follow an expected Bayesian linear framework. Also, the results suggest that the adjustment process slows down as the new information arrives. I could not confirm that fishermen use normalization strategy to minimize risk perception as a psychological method of coping with the threat.
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26 September 2022
Research Article|
September 26 2022
Risk Perceptions in Fisheries and the Non-Bayesian Learning Process Available to Purchase
Akbar Marvasti
Akbar Marvasti
Southeast Fisheries Science Center
, NOAA, 75 Virginia Beach Dr., Miami, FL 33149, USA
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The opinions expressed herein are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of NOAA. I am thankful to Mary Davis at Temple University for the survey data and to James Law, Paul Bassick, and Ted Harington at USCG for the accident data and to Eric Thunberg at NOAA for his comments.
Online ISSN: 2326-6201
Print ISSN: 2326-6198
© 2022 A. Marvasti
2022
A. Marvasti
Licensed re-use rights only
Review of Behavioral Economics (2022) 9 (3): 263–292.
Citation
Marvasti A (2022), "Risk Perceptions in Fisheries and the Non-Bayesian Learning Process". Review of Behavioral Economics, Vol. 9 No. 3 pp. 263–292, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/105.00000159
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