Dual-Path Influence of Risk Perception on Construction Workers’ Safety Participation and the Moderating Role of Mindfulness

Zhaobiao Zong, Tianyi Long, Yifan Ou, Shuang Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Working in risky environments, construction workers’ actions to contribute to cultivating a safety-oriented environment (i.e., safety participation) have consistently emerged as a leading factor in construction safety incidents. Safety participation is crucial for improving workplace safety among construction workers. Although the perception of workplace risk has been found to influence safety participation behavior, the results have been inconsistent. Some studies suggest that risk perception decreases safety participation behavior, whereas others suggest it increases it. In this study, we consider anxiety and reflection about death as important psychological mechanisms to explain why risk perception may either increase or decrease safety participation behaviors. Based on emotion as social information theory, we propose from an emotional perspective that risk perception increases construction workers’ death anxiety and thus decreases their safety participation behavior. Subsequently, we propose from a cognitive perspective that risk perception increases construction workers’ death reflection, thereby increasing their safety participation behavior. Further, these relationships are affected by construction workers’ mindfulness (an individual’s awareness and attention to the experience of the present moment without judgment). Using data from 532 construction workers, we tested the proposed conceptual model. Construction workers with high levels of mindfulness showed a decrease in the negative effect of death anxiety on safety participation behavior, whereas the positive effect of death reflection on safety participation behavior increased. These findings extend the relevant literature on risk perception and safety participation behavior by adding two critical psychological explanatory mechanisms, death anxiety and reflection, and mindfulness, an essential contingent factor. In addition, this study enriches current theoretical perspectives by applying emotion as social information theory to explore the relationship between risk perception and safety participation behavior.
Original languageEnglish
Article number04024194
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Construction Engineering and Management
Volume151
Issue number1
Early online date14 Nov 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

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