• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

SafetyRisk.net

Humanising Health and Safety and Risk

  • Home
    • About
      • Privacy Policy
      • Contact
  • FREE
    • Slogans
      • Researchers Reveal the Top 10 Most Effective Safety Slogans Of All Time
      • When Slogans Don’t Work
      • CLASSIC, FAMOUS and INFAMOUS SAFETY QUOTES
      • BIGGEST COLLECTION of WORKPLACE HEALTH and SAFETY SLOGANS 2023
      • CATCHY and FUNNY SAFETY SLOGANS FOR THE WORKPLACE
      • COVID-19 (Coronavirus, Omicron) Health and Safety Slogans and Quotes for the Workplace
      • Safety Acronyms
      • You know Where You Can Stick Your Safety Slogans
      • Sayings, Slogans, Aphorisms and the Discourse of Simple
      • Spanish Safety Slogans – Consignas de seguridad
      • Safety Slogans List
      • Road Safety Slogans 2023
      • How to write your own safety slogans
      • Why Are Safety Slogans Important
      • Safety Slogans Don’t Save Lives
      • 40 Free Safety Slogans For the Workplace
      • Safety Slogans for Work
    • FREE SAFETY eBOOKS
    • Free Hotel and Resort Risk Management Checklist
    • FREE DOWNLOADS
    • TOP 50
    • FREE RISK ASSESSMENT FORMS
    • Find a Safety Consultant
    • Free Safety Program Documents
    • Psychology Of Safety
    • Safety Ideas That Work
    • HEALTH and SAFETY MANUALS
    • FREE SAFE WORK METHOD STATEMENT RESOURCES
    • Whats New In Safety
    • FUN SAFETY STUFF
    • Health and Safety Training
    • SAFETY COURSES
    • Safety Training Needs Analysis and Matrix
    • Top 20 Safety Books
    • This Toaster Is Hot
    • Free Covid-19 Toolbox Talks
    • Download Page – Please Be Patient With Larger Files…….
    • SAFETY IMAGES, Photos, Unsafe Pictures and Funny Fails
    • How to Calculate TRIFR, LTIFR and Other Health and Safety Indicators
    • Download Safety Moments from Human Resources Secretariat
  • Social Psychology Of Risk
    • What is Psychological Health and Safety at Work?
    • Safety Psychology Terminology
    • Some Basics on Social Psychology & Risk
    • Understanding The Social Psychology of Risk – Prof Karl E. Weick
    • The Psychology of Leadership in Risk
    • Conducting a Psychology and Culture Safety Walk
    • The Psychology of Conversion – 20 Tips to get Started
    • Understanding The Social Psychology of Risk And Safety
    • Psychology and safety
    • The Psychology of Safety
    • Hot Toaster
    • TALKING RISK VIDEOS
    • WHAT IS SAFETY
    • THE HOT TOASTER
    • THE ZERO HARM DEBATE
    • SEMIOTICS
    • LEADERSHIP
  • Dr Long Posts
    • ALL POSTS
    • Learning Styles Matter
    • There is no Hierarchy of Controls
    • Scaffolding, Readiness and ZPD in Learning
    • What Can Safety Learn From Playschool?
    • Presentation Tips for Safety People
    • Dialogue Do’s and Don’ts
    • It’s Only a Symbol
    • Ten Cautions About Safety Checklists
    • Zero is Unethical
    • First Report on Zero Survey
    • There is No Objectivity, Deal With it!
  • THEMES
    • Psychosocial Safety
    • Resiliencing
    • Risk Myths
    • Safety Myths
    • Safety Culture Silences
    • Safety Culture
    • Psychological Health and Safety
    • Zero Harm
    • Due Diligence
  • Free Learning
    • Introduction to SPoR – Free
    • FREE RISK and SAFETY EBOOKS
    • FREE ebook – Guidance for the beginning OHS professional
    • Free EBook – Effective Safety Management Systems
    • Free EBook – Lessons I Have Learnt
  • Psychosocial Safety
    • What is Psychosocial Safety
    • Psychological Safety
      • What is Psychological Health and Safety at Work?
      • Managing psychosocial hazards at work
      • Psychological Safety – has it become the next Maslow’s hammer?
      • What is Psychosocial Safety
      • Psychological Safety Slogans and Quotes
      • What is Psychological Safety?
      • Understanding Psychological Terminology
      • Psycho-Social and Socio-Psychological, What’s the Difference?
      • Build a Psychologically Safe Workplace by Taking Risks and Analysing Failures
      • It’s not weird – it’s a psychological safety initiative!
You are here: Home / Covid-19 / The Semiotics of COVID-19 and the Social Amplification of Risk

The Semiotics of COVID-19 and the Social Amplification of Risk

April 5, 2020 by Dr Rob Long 6 Comments

What can we learn from the semiotics of the Coronavirus crisis?

Semiotics is the study of signs and symbol systems and how they emerge from and penetrate the human unconscious. Semiosis is the study of how these symbols systems/myths create meaning and their significance for human being/living. The way we symbolize what is significant to us says much about how we create meaning and understanding in what we experience. What is most powerful in semiotics is the way symbols, signs, icons and graphics penetrate the unconscious. So, for the purpose of this discussion let’s explore some of the common symbols being presented us so far through this crisis.

The Corona Microbe

As an interesting study it is worth exploring the common symbols used to depict the COVID-19 crisis particularly as this virus can’t be seen. A simple exploration of media pages and Google images shows that the most common symbol for COVID-19 is the microscopic virus cell itself. This microscopic cell has now become the backdrop for most news reports.

image

Semantically, Covid-19 it is also being referred to as the ‘invisible enemy’ (https://www.economist.com/podcasts/2020/03/20/the-invisible-enemy-is-america-prepared-for-covid-19). What is also invisible is the way these semiotics operate on the unconscious and collective unconscious (Jung). Lotman called the collective unconscious ‘the semiosphere’ (https://monoskop.org/images/5/5e/Lotman_Yuri_M_Universe_of_the_Mind_A_Semiotic_Theory_of_Culture_1990.pdf ). If we don’t include an understanding of the semiosphere in the way we define culture then we will remain seduced into thinking culture is a system of behaviours.

People and the Health System

The second common symbol of the COVID-19 crisis is health workers dressed in PPE: gowns, masks, gloves, beds, wards and face shields and crowded overloaded health facilities. Often the context/location for these images is a hospital or field hospital with the messages that conveys the pressure the crisis places on the health system.

clip_image004

clip_image006

clip_image008

clip_image010

Graphs and Statistics

The third set of images is graphs, maps and statistics showing the spread and nature of the crisis and the now common reference to ‘flattening the curve’ (https://www.wired.com/story/the-promising-math-behind-flattening-the-curve/ ). An unfortunate by-product particularly of the semiotics of statistics and graphs is that they desensitize humans to suffering (https://www.researchgate.net/publication/283318445_The_More_Who_Die_the_Less_We_Care_Psychic_Numbing_and_Genocide ). This is why one of the bizarre dynamics of the risk and safety industry is a lack of care.

clip_image012clip_image014

clip_image016

clip_image018

Spacial Intelligence

The fourth semiotic is that of space, showing social distancing and indeed, those who have not practiced it. The Bondi Beach example (https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/22/quiet-with-some-defiance-as-bondi-beach-succumbs-to-coronavirus-closure) is now well known. Similarly, deserted streets and cafes have also become symbols for COVID-19.

clip_image020

clip_image022

clip_image024

Death

The fifth symbol of COVID-19 is the gruesome image of morgues or makeshift morgue (https://www.businessinsider.com.au/coronavirus-covid-19-deaths-bodies-morgue-storage-capacity-maxed-out-2020-3?r=US&IR=T). In Spain where the crisis is acute Ice Hockey rinks and refrigeration trucks are being used (https://edition.cnn.com/2020/03/24/europe/spain-ice-rink-morgue-coronavirus-intl/index.html).

The Face Mask

The final semiotic for discussion is perhaps the most pronounced symbol of the coronavirus – the face mask. The covering of the human face is perhaps one of the most profound social distancing measures we could invoke: it limits communication, reading facial expressions, responding to smiles and like all masks can hide what it is to be human. The social harm this causes has been symbolized by the masking of statues (https://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2020/apr/03/masked-statues-around-the-world-in-pictures?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other). In many ways masking serves as the silent icon for this crisis.

clip_image026

Why is Semiotic Awareness Significant?

Our perception is profoundly conditioned by what we see and what is shown to us (https://edition.cnn.com/2020/03/19/world/gallery/novel-coronavirus-outbreak/index.html). How we absorb hidden unconscious messages through semiotics is critical to understanding the amplification and attenuation of risk.

We know from studies in The Social Psychology of Risk (SPoR) and the work of Pidgeon, Kasperson and Slovic (2003) in The Social Amplification of Risk (SARF) that all risk is Amplified or Attenuated (https://cllr.com.au/product/social-amplification-risk-unit-8/) by the way risk is presented and perceived. The mechanics of SARF has been presented in the SARF Model (below). Through a study of this model one can see how various ‘channels’ of inputs work together to socially to amplify or attenuate risk.

Unfortunately, the model is quite mechanical and omits critical aspects of amplification such as ‘pre-amplification’. What the model does not include is any discussion of such as pre-amplification, semiotics, the semiosphere or the notion of the collective unconscious, even though it is embedded in the model through assumption, transition and suggestion (eg. each arrow). However, for the purposes of this discussion an awareness of this model will do. In studies of amplification in SPoR we have developed this model to include missing critical aspects of the semiosphere.

The SARF Model

clip_image028

When we consider how risk is amplified or attenuated we ought to include a consideration of how social dynamics work invisibly through semiotics on the collective unconscious. Such a consideration helps one understand how risk is attributed but also how certain semiotics misdirect us away from Real Risk (https://www.humandymensions.com/product/real-risk/). It is because semiotics operate unconsciously that people ‘fall’ for misdirection, propaganda, conspiracy theories and vested interests hidden in semiotic narratives about Covid-19. (I have deliberately resisted the inclusion of toilet paper in this list and have written about the psychology of hoarding previously – https://safetyrisk.net/hoarding-as-a-psychosis-against-uncertainty/)

Conclusion

One of the important lessons learned from a study of semiotic influence on the unconscious is the affect on children. The power of semiotics to influence children is often ignored and underestimated because we are not semiotically aware. Unfortunately the culture of the safety industry (as evidenced by the AIHS BoK and WHS Curriculum) tends to think that learning is cognitive, rational and disembodied – the opposite is the case. Most people are not aware of the significance of semiotic influence and rarely ask the question: What are these images doing to me?

If we wish to better understand Real Risk, then Safety needs to start by asking this question.

  • Bio
  • Latest Posts
  • More about Rob
Dr Rob Long

Dr Rob Long

Expert in Social Psychology, Principal & Trainer at Human Dymensions
Dr Rob Long

Latest posts by Dr Rob Long (see all)

  • There is no Fast and Slow Thinking, Nor Quick Learning - November 28, 2023
  • Fragility, Resilience and AntiFragility in Risk - November 28, 2023
  • Why Zero Cannot Understand the Basics of Safety – ALARP and Due Diligence - November 26, 2023
  • No Room for Ethics in a Zero ‘Mindset’ - November 26, 2023
  • Zero Harm and the Fear of Failure - November 25, 2023
Dr Rob Long
PhD., MEd., MOH., BEd., BTh., Dip T., Dip Min., Cert IV TAA, MRMIA Rob is the founder of Human Dymensions and has extensive experience, qualifications and expertise across a range of sectors including government, education, corporate, industry and community sectors over 30 years. Rob has worked at all levels of the education and training sector including serving on various post graduate executive, post graduate supervision, post graduate course design and implementation programs.

Please share our posts

  • Click to print (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)

Related

Filed Under: Covid-19, Robert Long, Semiotics Tagged With: coronavirus

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. bernardcorden says

    April 6, 2020 at 7:26 AM

    Not with a bang but a whimper: TS Eliot – The Hollow Men

    https://allpoetry.com/The-Hollow-Men

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/23/life-after-lockdown-has-china-really-beaten-coronavirus

    Reply
    • Rob Long says

      April 7, 2020 at 3:38 PM

      TS Elliot indeed. I think we might get much more from Prufrock about understanding the semiotics of risk than a hundred BoKs.

      Reply
  2. bernardcorden says

    April 5, 2020 at 5:44 PM

    The following links provide access to the response of the USS Reagan following the Tohoku tsunami and Fukushima meltdown:

    https://www.rt.com/usa/uss-reagan-fukushima-radiation-979/

    https://apjjf.org/2014/12/20/Kyle-Cleveland/4116/article.html

    Reply
  3. bernardcorden says

    April 5, 2020 at 4:22 PM

    It would also be interesting to count the number of times the terms uncharted waters or unprecedented have been used at federal and state parliament media conferences

    Reply
  4. John Culvenor says

    April 5, 2020 at 1:17 PM

    Good set out of how the story is being told visually.

    Reply
    • Rob Long says

      April 5, 2020 at 2:45 PM

      Thanks John. Thinking semiotically is such a critical skill to foster for all safety people.

      Reply

Do you have any thoughts? Please share them belowCancel reply

Primary Sidebar

Search and Discover More on this Site

Never miss a post - Subscribe via Email

Enter your email address and join other discerning risk and safety people who receive notifications of new posts by email

Join 7,521 other subscribers.

FREE eBOOK DOWNLOADS

Recent Comments

  • Rob Long on Semiotic Methods to Help Tackle Risk
  • BRENT R CHARLTON on Semiotic Methods to Help Tackle Risk
  • Rob Long on Semiotic Methods to Help Tackle Risk
  • Jason Martell on Semiotic Methods to Help Tackle Risk
  • Rob Long on Critical Sources of Harm Ignored by Safety=Zero
  • simon p cassin on Critical Sources of Harm Ignored by Safety=Zero
  • Matt Thorne on Book Launch – SPoR and Semiotics, Methods to Tackle Risk
  • Rob Long on A Book to Help Get You Started on Cultural Improvement in Risk
  • Matt Thorne on Book Launch – SPoR and Semiotics, Methods to Tackle Risk
  • Peter Saaman on Book Launch – SPoR and Semiotics, Methods to Tackle Risk
  • Rob Long on Book Launch – SPoR and Semiotics, Methods to Tackle Risk
  • Brian on Having Meetings Without ‘Meeting’
  • Shannon Barter on Embracing Risk–Video
  • Brent Charlton on Wo-Men in Safety
  • Robert Long on Wo-Men in Safety
  • Need to Stay employed on Embracing Risk–Video
  • Anonymous on How to Calculate TRIFR, LTIFR and Other Health and Safety Indicators
  • Anonymous on How to Calculate TRIFR, LTIFR and Other Health and Safety Indicators
  • Anonymous on Deconstructing iCam, Useful or Useless
  • Anonymous on Deconstructing iCam, Useful or Useless

RECOMMENDED READING

viral post – iso 45003 and what it cannot do

Introduction to SPOR – FREE!!

Psychosocial Safety and Mental Health Series

Don’t be Obsessed with Safety

A Guide to Psychosocial Safety Skills

Mindfulness is NOT Brain-fullness and other Psychosocial Myths

Have You Had a Drink of SafeTea?

If You Can’t Manage Fallibility, You’ll Never Tackle Psychosocial Health

Embodiment, Myth and Psychosocial Risk

7 Golden Rules that are NOT Golden

Why Zero Vision Can Never Tackle Mental Health

If Psychosocial Health Matters, Stop Hot Desking

Effective Strategies in Mental Health at Work

More Posts from this Category

NEW! Free Download

Please take our 2 minute zero survey

Footer

Top Posts & Pages. Sad that most are so dumb but this is what safety luves

  • Christmas Safety Messages, Toolbox Talks, Safety Moments and Slogans
  • CATCHY and FUNNY SAFETY SLOGANS FOR THE WORKPLACE
  • FREE RISK ASSESSMENT FORMS, CHECKISTS, REGISTERS, TEMPLATES and APPS
  • BIGGEST COLLECTION of WORKPLACE HEALTH and SAFETY SLOGANS 2023
  • How to Calculate TRIFR, LTIFR and Other Health and Safety Indicators
  • Free Safety Moments and Toolbox Talk Examples, Tips and Resources
  • Road Safety Slogans 2023
  • Free Risk Assessment Template in Excel Format
  • SAFETY IMAGES, Photos, Unsafe Pictures and Funny Fails
  • Icebreakers and Games that Safety Trainers Play

Recent Posts

  • There is no Fast and Slow Thinking, Nor Quick Learning
  • Fragility, Resilience and AntiFragility in Risk
  • The Sponsors of Zero Are
  • Why Zero Cannot Understand the Basics of Safety – ALARP and Due Diligence
  • No Room for Ethics in a Zero ‘Mindset’
  • Zero Harm and the Fear of Failure
  • Semiotic Methods to Help Tackle Risk
  • Top 10 Simple Things You Can Do To Dramatically Improve Safety
  • SPoR and Semiotics, A Conversation – Free Download
  • The Traffic in Zero Only Goes One Way
  • Critical Sources of Harm Ignored by Safety=Zero
  • Zero and a Culture of Denial
  • Shaping Change to Zero
  • A Book to Help Get You Started on Cultural Improvement in Risk
  • Risk Intelligence and What to Do About It – A Video
  • Feel Good Safety and Un-Ethical Ego-Centrism
  • Book Launch – SPoR and Semiotics, Methods to Tackle Risk
  • When Zero Doesn’t Work, Don’t Change Anything
  • Having Meetings Without ‘Meeting’
  • Leaders in Safety are NOT Gurus
  • Method and Message Congruence in Risk
  • Guilt and Shame, The By-Products of Safety-Zero
  • Update on Zero Survey, Just believe!
  • Zero is NOT the Only Acceptable Number
  • Don’t be Obsessed with Safety
  • Zero Ideology as Maximum Offense, Zero Benefit
  • Embracing Risk–Video
  • Hey CEO? Does Zero Apply to You?
  • OHS Voices from the Resistance – Rosa Carrillo
  • A Guide to Psychosocial Safety Skills
  • A Guide to Tokenism in Ethics in Safety
  • The Questions You Ask in Safety are Showing?
  • Introduction to SPoR, SEEK and Culture
  • What is Safety? Video
  • Understanding Motivation is Essential to Understanding Risk
  • Semiotic and Poetic Literacy for Safety
  • Speak Up, but Don’t Tackle the Cause
  • KISS Safety in a VUCA World
  • OHS Voices From the Resistance – Book review
  • Wo-Men in Safety
  • SPoR Podcasts Back Up and Running
  • What is Semiotics? – Video
  • Finding Balance in SPoR
  • Zero as Extremist Ideology
  • Understanding Cults and Safety/Zero
  • Dot to Dot Safety for Non-Professionals
  • Two New Videos from Novellus
  • Mindfulness is NOT Brain-fullness and other Psychosocial Myths
  • The Safety Belief System
  • The Nonsense of ‘Safety Awareness’

VIRAL POST!!! HOW TO QUIT THE SAFETY INDUSTRY

FEATURED POSTS

Biases and Perceptions in Safety

Risk vs Hazard vs Safety

New Social Psychology of Risk Website

Certificate, Diploma and Masters Studies in SPoR

New Video Available – Semiotics Walk Workshop

What Are Observation-Conversation Skills?

The Seduction to Simplify Safety

Intuitional Ways of Knowing in Safety

Critical Thinking At Risk

Knowledge and Curriculum for Risk and Safety People

The Futility of the Centralised Safety Management System?

What is Critical Listening when Dealing with Risk?

Surfacing – Making the Unconscious Conscious

Book Launch – SPoR and Semiotics, Methods to Tackle Risk

Nothing is Learned Through Brutalism

The Soul of Mental Health

Making Sense of Safety Management Systems

Zero Discourse as Gobbledygook

Social Sensemaking – Book Launch Dates & Venues Confirmed

Safety Gives Me the Right over Other Rights

There is no Hierarchy of Controls

Social Media and Safety

Is Risk and Safety Perfectionism a Disorder?

Safety and Risk Leadership Master Class

SEEK is not a Method

Humanising Workers Compensation (Sydney Workshop)

A Parallel Universe in Safety

The Safety Worldview

Looking Forward, Looking Back

Semiotics, Semiology and Safety Sense

When the Target Drives the Method

Risk You Can Eat

Making the World fit the Safety Worldview

Managing Risk Rather Than Striving for Absolute Safety

Listening, Learning, Helping and Caring about Risk

Visualising the EHS Role

We need to make sure this can never happen again

Embodied Risk

Positives and Negatives in Dialectic in Safety

Disrupting the Methodology in Safety?

More Posts from this Category

VIRAL POST – The Risk Matrix Myth

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address and join other discerning risk and safety people who receive notifications of new posts by email

Join 7,521 other subscribers.

WHAT IS PSYCHOLOGICAL SAFETY?

What is Psychological Safety at Work?


WHAT IS PSYCHOSOCIAL SAFETY