Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/handle/10553/142379
Title: Influence of environmental variables on fear of crime: Comparing self-report data with physiological measures in an experimental design
Authors: Castro-Toledo, Francisco J.
Perea García, Juan Olvido 
Bautista Ortuño, Rebeca
Panagiotis, Mitkidis
UNESCO Clasification: 560203 Filosofía del derecho
Keywords: Fear of crime
Perception of security
Self-report
Physiologicalmeasures
Environmental variables
Issue Date: 2017
Journal: Journal of Experimental Criminology 
Abstract: Objectives Self-reports and questionnaires have been the preferred research methods in the criminological field of Bfear of crime^ (FOC) since its rise in the 1960s. Our study had two main goals: (1) to measure the physiological indicators of fear in real time and (2) to compare these data with those obtained through self-reports, designed also to measure the emotion of fear. Methods An experimental study was conducted over the course of a week during late February 2016 in Aarhus (Denmark), in which the focus was on traditional environmental variables in the field of FOC (i.e., poor lighting conditions). Results Our results support the ideas that: (1) the absence of good luminosity in an open public space in an urban setting elicits physiological reactions of arousal that can be taken as indicators of experiences of fear and (2) heart rate appears to capture aspects of the emotion of fear that are not reflected in data obtained through self-report questionnaires.
URI: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/handle/10553/142379
ISSN: 1572-8315
DOI: 10.1007/s11292-017-9295-1
Source: Journal of Experimental Criminology [EISSN 1572-8315],v. 13, p. 537-545, (Julio 2017)
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