Abstract

Understanding how workers perceive risk is essential to construction safety management. Firstly, an event-related potential (ERP) experiment was conducted to investigate the relationship between risk, likelihood, and severity. Then, a linear model was developed to predict workers' risk perception based on ERP components and quantify the relative importance of severity to likelihood. Finally, an additive model was constructed to reflect the risk perception pattern. The results indicate: (1) Workers' emotional responses stem from the process of associating accident consequences in severity assessment, which is represented by the late positive potential (LPP) component. (2) Workers' risk perception relies more on severity compared with likelihood. (3) The additive model (risk = 0.203 * likelihood +0.758 * severity) better matches the risk perception patterns than the multiplicative model. The research results provide a new perspective for understanding workers' risk perception patterns and contributing to proactive safety management in the construction industry.

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