AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how interactions between police officers and civilians can be dangerous due to the potential for physical threats, focusing on the experiences of both parties.
  • Research has mostly centered on how police perceive threats from civilians, often minimizing how civilians view police as potential threats in high-stress situations.
  • Findings from three studies reveal that civilians tend to avoid police more quickly, exhibit stronger defensive behaviors, and show heightened physiological responses when encountering police compared to non-police situations, suggesting that these reactions can influence behavior during real-life police interactions.

Article Abstract

Interactions between police officers and civilians incur for both police and civilians the possibility of danger due to a nonzero likelihood of encountering a physical threat. A body of work examining the implications of threat processes during police-civilian interactions focuses almost exclusively on the perspective of police officers, under the auspice that police use-of-force decisions stem from perceptions and misperceptions of threat (e.g., research on the shooter bias). Almost no research has examined these dynamics from the perspective of civilians whose encounter with police involves interacting with an armed and potentially dangerous individual. In the current work, we advance the idea that just as police may respond to civilians as threats, civilians may respond to the police as threats. That is, among civilians, encountering the police may evoke a combination of defensive bodily and behavioral responses. Across three studies ( = 603) each utilizing unique measures of defensive behavioral and physiological responding, we found that people more rapidly avoid police than nonpolice, demonstrate enhanced defensive freeze responses to police than nonpolice, and evince larger defensive physiological preparation toward police than nonpolice. In light of these patterns, we discuss the implications of defensive responses for shaping civilian behavior in real-world encounters with the police. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/pspi0000439DOI Listing

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