PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Online interest regarding violent attacks, gun control, and gun purchase: A causal analysis.

  • Laura H Gunn,
  • Enrique Ter Horst,
  • Talar W Markossian,
  • German Molina

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207924
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. e0207924

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundIncreased interest about gun ownership and gun control are oftentimes driven by informational shocks in a common factor, namely violent attacks, and the perceived need for higher levels of safety. A causal depiction of the societal interest around violent attacks, gun control and gun purchase, both synchronous and over time, should be a stepping stone for designing future strategies regarding the safety concerns of the U.S. population.ObjectiveExamine the causal relationships between unexpected increases in population interest about violent attacks, gun control, and gun purchase.MethodsRelationships among online searches for information about violent attacks, gun control, and gun purchase occurring between 2004 and 2017 in the U.S. are explained through a novel structural vector autoregressive time series model to account for simultaneous causal relationships.ResultsMore than 20% of the stationary variability in each of gun control and gun purchase interest can be explained by the remaining factors. Gun control interest appears to be caused, in part, by violent attacks informational shocks, yet violent attacks, although impactful, have a lesser effect than gun control debate on long-term gun ownership interests.ConclusionsThe form in which gun control has been introduced in public debate may have further increased gun ownership interest. Reactive gun purchase interest may be an unintended side effect of gun control debate. U.S. policymakers may need to rethink current approaches to promotion of gun control, and whether societal policy debate without policy outcomes could be having unintended effects.