Three
items appear below:
1
Survey on Attitudes to
Asteroids
B Stett
2
Survey Form [and showing number of replies to each question]
3
Asteroids and Their
Impact--Update
L Storm
SURVEY ON
ATTITUDES TO ASTEROIDS
(Investigator 63,
1998 November)
Following the receipt of the article Asteroids
And Their Impact
(Investigator 62), a mini survey of 65 people was conducted.
The response total
to each question is marked on the survey form below.
The sample size
was too small to represent the whole population and therefore results
are merely suggestive.
The tables of
results below indicate that:
- Under 21 year olds are more
worried by asteroids than those over 21;
- Respondents who watched movies
about asteroids worry more than those who didn’t with maximum worry at
two movies;
- Respondents of all four age
categories are equally prepared to donate $1-$10 to research but the
under 21s and over 60s are more ready to donate $51-$100;
- Males are less likely to donate
$1-$10 to research than females but more likely to donate $51-$100;
- Educational level is independent
of willingness to donate to research.
DEGREE OF WORRY OVER ASTEROIDS BY
AGE
|
NO WORRY |
SLIGHT |
VERY |
TERRIFIED |
Under 21 |
[4] 36 % |
[5] 45% |
|
[2] 18% |
21 to 40 |
[24] 86% |
[2] 7% |
[2] 7% |
|
41 to 60 |
[16] 80% |
[3] 15% |
[1] 5% |
|
Over 60 |
[5] 83 % |
[1] 17% |
|
|
WORRY COMPARED TO
NUMBER OF MOVIES WATCHED
[Two errors in the
magazine are here corrected]
(Due to small
sample size the three levels of "worry" are combined)
|
NO WORRY |
WORRIED |
0 Movies |
24 = 89% |
3 = 1 |
1
" |
12 = 67% |
6 = 33% |
2
" |
6 = 60% |
4 = 40% |
3
" |
4 = 67% |
2 = 33% |
4+
" |
3 = 75% |
1 = 25% |
SURVEY FORM
(SHOWING NUMBERS OF ANSWERS)
SURVEY
A survey on your
thoughts about asteroids (large rocks from space) hitting the Earth
like in the recent movies Deep Impact and Armageddon.
Tick the most
accurate answer to each question:
(1) Are you a:
Male? [24]
Female? [41]
(2) What is your
age?
20 or less [11]
21 to 40 [28]
41 to 60 [20]
Over 60 [6]
(3) What is the
highest level of education you attempted?
Primary
school
[4]
High
school
[14]
Year
12
[13]
TAFE or Apprenticeship [16]
University
[18]
(4) How worried
are you about an asteroid hurting you or your property?
No worry at all [49]
Slightly worried [11]
Very worried [3]
Terrified
[2]
(5) How often do
you think about an asteroid possibly dropping on you?
Never
[45]
Occasionally
[19]
On average once a week [0]
Many times every week [1]
(6) How much per
year would you he prepared to donate for research into the risk of
asteroids to Australia?
Nothing [38]
$1 to $10 [20]
$11 to $50 [3]
$51 to $100 [4]
(7) How many
different movies about asteroids or comets hitting Earth have you
watched?
0
1
2
3
4 5 or more
[27] [18]
[10]
[6]
[
4 ]
|
Asteroids
and
Their Impact—Update
Lance Storm
(Investigator 69,
1999 November)
Investigator (#63)
published some data from a survey undertaken by Bernhard Stett months
ago on the influence of asteroids on a small sample of South Australian
(65 people). His data was presented in tabular form in that issue.
Recently I asked
Mr. Stett for his data, in order to do a statistical analysis for him,
but he only had the statistics as presented in that issue (there were a
couple of mistakes. The correct data is presented in Table 1).
Table I
Number of Movies Seen about Asteroids or Comets and Number of People
(Not Worried / Worried).
MOVIES |
NOT WORRIED |
WORRIED |
TOTALS |
0 |
24 |
3 |
27 |
1 |
12 |
6 |
18 |
2 |
6 |
4 |
10 |
3 |
4 |
2 |
6 |
4+ |
3 |
1 |
4 |
TOTAL |
49 |
16 |
65 |
However, I was
able to perform correlational analyses on these data, but they are to
be taken with due consideration of the fact that the calculations are
from the generalized data in Table 1. Note also that the sample size is
only 65 cases.
Nevertheless, an
interesting fact emerged. A significant, and extremely high, negative
correlation was found between ‘movies’ and those people ‘not worried’
by the possibility of asteroid or comet threat. (For those readers who
might be interested, the correlation takes the form of what is called a
Pearson’s r, which was negative .91, and a correlation this high would
only come up by chance about 3 times in 100. That means, the result is
probably not a coincidence.)
If the result is
not a coincidence, then we might be justified in saying something about
those individuals who are not worried by asteroid or comet threat. It
seems that non-worriers tend not to bother seeing too many movies about
‘extraterrestrial strikes’. Figure 1 shows this effect quite
dramatically. Maybe the shock value of these movies works
antagonistically (these films increase their worry). Note how the
biggest group don’t go to see any of these movies!
Figure 1. Number
of people (not worried/worried) and number of ‘extraterrestrial strike’
movies they see.
[The graph, Figure
1, is here omitted—ed.]
Of course we have
to be careful about attributing causal values to one or the other
variable (‘movie-going’ or ‘not being worried’). Maybe the movies don’t
increase worry. Perhaps non-worriers are not easily frightened to begin
with, and so they don’t bother seeing catastrophe movies about
asteroids or comets because these movies are just too boring for them,
especially after the first one. When you’ve seen one, you’ve seen them
all!
The extremely high
correlation for the ‘not worried’ group actually surprised me when I
saw how high it was. Such a high figure (r = -.91) is close to a
perfect correlation. That means you could predict with very little
margin for error (that is, you could just about guarantee), for the
subsample of 49 ‘not worried’ people, that if any one of them reported
that they saw four or more ‘strike’ movies you could say that they
would almost definitely be in the very smallest sub-group of
non-worriers.
Likewise, if any
one of these ‘not worried’ people announced that they were in the
smallest sub-group of ‘strike’ movie-goers, you could predict with
nearly 100% accuracy that they’ve seen four or more of these movies.
What about the
‘worried’ people in the sample? Figure 1 shows that it is difficult to
determine a trend in the size of sub-groups of ‘worried’ people
according to how many ‘strike’ movies they’ve seen, because there was
no significant correlation to be certain of a conclusion. But there was
a ‘statistical’ suggestion that they avoid these movies, perhaps
because they are easily worried by them. Or perhaps, they too simply
lose interest in these movies after one or two of them.
Statistics can
provide some very useful information about the population, if you feel
confident enough to make such an inference. In other words, it’s
possible that the whole population of Australians who fit into the ‘not
worried’ category don’t go to see too many ‘strike’ movies because such
movies don’t alleviate stress from the possibility of extraterrestrial
strike, OR these movies are just too boring after a while.
Lance Storm
Department of
Psychology
University of
Adelaide
AUSTRALIA 5005