Political affiliation moderates the link between gun violence exposure and firearm behaviors via perceptions of utility, safety, and threat

Abstract Background Gun violence exposure (GVE) is associated with a range of cognitive and behavioral outcomes. However, few studies have assessed how different forms of GVE relate to perceptions of safety, threat sensitivity, and views about the utility of firearms, and how these factors together...

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Main Authors: Sultan Altikriti, Daniel C. Semenza, Michael D. Anestis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-08-01
Series:Injury Epidemiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40621-025-00604-x
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author Sultan Altikriti
Daniel C. Semenza
Michael D. Anestis
author_facet Sultan Altikriti
Daniel C. Semenza
Michael D. Anestis
author_sort Sultan Altikriti
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Gun violence exposure (GVE) is associated with a range of cognitive and behavioral outcomes. However, few studies have assessed how different forms of GVE relate to perceptions of safety, threat sensitivity, and views about the utility of firearms, and how these factors together influence firearm-related behavior. Moreover, studies have not explored whether these effects may differ by political orientation. This study examines how GVE is associated with perceptions of safety, threat sensitivity, and firearm utility, and how these perceptions relate to firearm carrying and storage practices across political groups. Methods The data for this study come from a subset of adults with firearm access (n = 3,042) drawn from a nationally representative sample of 8,010 U.S. adults. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to assess the relationships between GVE, threat sensitivity, perceptions about the utility of firearms, perceived neighborhood safety, and firearm-related outcomes. Multiple-group SEM assessed how political orientation affects those relationships. Results Liberals were more cognitively responsive to GVE (i.e., increased threat sensitivity and decreased neighborhood safety), while conservatives were more behaviorally responsive (i.e., increased carrying). Additionally, perceived utility of firearms was the most robust predictor of carrying and unsecure storage, consistently predicting firearm-related behavior in the general sample and within each group. Conclusions GVE can occur through multiple means, direct and indirect, each with distinct effects on perceptions of safety, threat, and firearm utility, as well as on firearm-related behavior. The perceived utility of firearms seems to play a central role in the relationship between GVE and firearm-related behavior. Political affiliation influences how individuals interpret and respond to such exposure. Future research should investigate the reasons for group differences in response to GVE.
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spelling doaj-art-2320b3c9fd5c4044a4f9d76b01ee0fef2025-08-20T03:04:17ZengBMCInjury Epidemiology2197-17142025-08-0112111110.1186/s40621-025-00604-xPolitical affiliation moderates the link between gun violence exposure and firearm behaviors via perceptions of utility, safety, and threatSultan Altikriti0Daniel C. Semenza1Michael D. Anestis2New Jersey Gun Violence Research CenterNew Jersey Gun Violence Research CenterNew Jersey Gun Violence Research CenterAbstract Background Gun violence exposure (GVE) is associated with a range of cognitive and behavioral outcomes. However, few studies have assessed how different forms of GVE relate to perceptions of safety, threat sensitivity, and views about the utility of firearms, and how these factors together influence firearm-related behavior. Moreover, studies have not explored whether these effects may differ by political orientation. This study examines how GVE is associated with perceptions of safety, threat sensitivity, and firearm utility, and how these perceptions relate to firearm carrying and storage practices across political groups. Methods The data for this study come from a subset of adults with firearm access (n = 3,042) drawn from a nationally representative sample of 8,010 U.S. adults. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to assess the relationships between GVE, threat sensitivity, perceptions about the utility of firearms, perceived neighborhood safety, and firearm-related outcomes. Multiple-group SEM assessed how political orientation affects those relationships. Results Liberals were more cognitively responsive to GVE (i.e., increased threat sensitivity and decreased neighborhood safety), while conservatives were more behaviorally responsive (i.e., increased carrying). Additionally, perceived utility of firearms was the most robust predictor of carrying and unsecure storage, consistently predicting firearm-related behavior in the general sample and within each group. Conclusions GVE can occur through multiple means, direct and indirect, each with distinct effects on perceptions of safety, threat, and firearm utility, as well as on firearm-related behavior. The perceived utility of firearms seems to play a central role in the relationship between GVE and firearm-related behavior. Political affiliation influences how individuals interpret and respond to such exposure. Future research should investigate the reasons for group differences in response to GVE.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40621-025-00604-xGun violence exposurePerceived neighborhood safetyThreat sensitivityPerceived firearm utilityFirearm carryingFirearm storage
spellingShingle Sultan Altikriti
Daniel C. Semenza
Michael D. Anestis
Political affiliation moderates the link between gun violence exposure and firearm behaviors via perceptions of utility, safety, and threat
Injury Epidemiology
Gun violence exposure
Perceived neighborhood safety
Threat sensitivity
Perceived firearm utility
Firearm carrying
Firearm storage
title Political affiliation moderates the link between gun violence exposure and firearm behaviors via perceptions of utility, safety, and threat
title_full Political affiliation moderates the link between gun violence exposure and firearm behaviors via perceptions of utility, safety, and threat
title_fullStr Political affiliation moderates the link between gun violence exposure and firearm behaviors via perceptions of utility, safety, and threat
title_full_unstemmed Political affiliation moderates the link between gun violence exposure and firearm behaviors via perceptions of utility, safety, and threat
title_short Political affiliation moderates the link between gun violence exposure and firearm behaviors via perceptions of utility, safety, and threat
title_sort political affiliation moderates the link between gun violence exposure and firearm behaviors via perceptions of utility safety and threat
topic Gun violence exposure
Perceived neighborhood safety
Threat sensitivity
Perceived firearm utility
Firearm carrying
Firearm storage
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40621-025-00604-x
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AT danielcsemenza politicalaffiliationmoderatesthelinkbetweengunviolenceexposureandfirearmbehaviorsviaperceptionsofutilitysafetyandthreat
AT michaeldanestis politicalaffiliationmoderatesthelinkbetweengunviolenceexposureandfirearmbehaviorsviaperceptionsofutilitysafetyandthreat