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Abstract
Judgments of risk and judgments of benefit have been found to be inversely related.
Activities or technologies that are judged high in risk tend to be judged low in benefit,
and vice versa. In the present study, we examine this inverse relationship in detail,
using two measures of relationship between risk and benefit. We find that the inverse
relationship is robust and indicative of a confounding of risk and benefit in people's
minds. This confounding is linked to a person's overall evaluation of an activity
or technology. Theoretical and practical implications of this risk-benefit confounding
are discussed.