Why Your Tourist Brain May Try To Drown You Tourist are a high-risk group for drownings. (Shutterstock)

During the mid-winter break, many vacationers head south to sandy beaches and turquoise waters. But in their efforts to unwind — and warm up — they often put themselves at risk of drowning by committing a simple cognitive error referred to as “tourist brain.”

Tourist brain occurs when visual cues in unfamiliar places coax vacationers into taking risks. Recent studies suggest that tourists think beach access points and resorts are located adjacent to safe swimming areas, particularly when visual cues such as manicured paths and promotional posters promote swimming at those locations.

There is a tendency for tourists to believe that tour guides know whether a beach is dangerous and that their suggestions on where to swim is based on safety.

In Costa Rica, for example, about 20 tourists drown each year. Most of those drownings involve tourists from the United States, Canada and Germany. The beaches of Costa Rica aren’t any more dangerous than others — the number of tourists who drown in other popular destinations is simply not known or reported.


innerself subscribe graphic


Why tourists drown

Tourists are a high-risk group for drownings. They’re generally unfamiliar with the beach and its safety measures, and have poor knowledge of beach hazards such as rip currents and breaking waves. This lack of knowledge is further exacerbated by language barriers, overconfidence in swimming ability and the tendency to make unwise swimming decisions after too many beers and umbrella drinks.

Why Your Tourist Brain May Try To Drown You Visual cues such as this palm-lined walkway can draw you to the water. While one of the signs warns hotel guests to be careful swimming, the design makes it appear that swimming is encouraged. At the end of this pathway is a series of semi-permanent rip currents along a beach popular with tourists on the Pacific coast of Costa Rica. (Chris Houser)

Many visitors simply do not think about water safety because beaches also offer plenty of distraction and temptation — drinks, vendors and people watching.

Many beaches popular with tourists do not have lifeguards or systems in place to warn beach users about dangerous waves, fast-changing tidal conditions, dangerous marine life such as sharks and jellyfish, and rip currents. Rip currents are believed to be the primary reason for rescues and drownings on recreational beaches in the U.S. and around the world.

Beachgoers should heed the warnings and directions of lifeguards. The number of rescues and drownings may be greater when lifeguards are perceived as being overly cautious. Remember, lifeguards are trained to spot hazards and issue warnings, even when conditions may look safe to the untrained eye.

Rip spotting

Rip currents (commonly referred to as rips or colloquially as rip tides) are found on ocean beaches and some large lakes around the world. Driven by the breaking of waves, these currents extend away from the shoreline and can flow at speeds easily capable of carrying swimmers far from the beach.

While it can be difficult to spot a rip, they can be identified by an area of relatively calm water between breaking waves, a patch of darker water or the offshore flow of water, sediment and debris.

{vembed Y=PuAlDTC_gIQ}

A person caught in a rip is transported away from shore into deeper waters, but not pulled under the water. If they are a weak swimmer or try to fight the current, they may panic and fail to find a way out of the rip and back to shore.

Peer pressure

Even when people are aware of rip currents and other beach hazards, they may not make the right decisions. Despite the presence of warnings, our actions are greatly influenced by the behaviour of others, peer pressure and group think. The social cost of not entering the water with the group may appear to outweigh the risk posed by entering the water.

College students on spring break or taking part in study abroad programs are prone to taking risks when on the beach. Their actions are guided by peer participation, sensation seeking and perceived benefits of being part of the group. Weak swimmers will put themselves in danger by following the group into breaking waves and deeper water. Young men are the most at risk for following the group and putting themselves in a dangerous situation.

Why Your Tourist Brain May Try To Drown You Respondents to a survey believed this beach was safe because people were on the beach and in the water. The rip current in the centre of the photograph was flowing at 1.5 meters per second. (Chris Houser)

In recent years, a large number of highly publicized drownings have involved students studying abroad. In 2011, for example, three teenagers from Ohio were swept out to sea at Playa Bejuco on the central Pacific coast of Costa Rica and drowned.

Confirmation bias among beachgoers

Dangerous currents are not present everywhere or at all times on the beach — the risk is different every time and every place you enter the water.

If someone enters the water and does not encounter strong waves or currents, they’re more likely to engage in risky behaviour the next day and the next, and so on. The behaviour of beach users is affected by confirmation bias, a cognitive shortcut where a person selectively pays attention to evidence confirming their preexisting beliefs and ignores evidence to the contrary.

Simply put, people believe, “If I did not drown or need rescue in the past, I will not drown or need rescue today or in the future.”

Why Your Tourist Brain May Try To Drown You How to escape a rip current. (Pixabay)

Tourists are three times less likely to make safe swimming choices than residents and regular beachgoers from the region.

Vacationers can stay safe only if they are aware that beaches at tourist destinations may be dangerous. They should swim at beaches patrolled by lifeguards who will rescue and intervene when someone puts themselves at risk.

Just because a beach is accessible, has numerous attractions and is near to a resort, does not make it safe.The Conversation

About The Author

Chris Houser, Professor of Earth and Environmental Science, and Dean of Science, University of Windsor

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

break

Related Books:

Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones

by James Clear

Atomic Habits provides practical advice for developing good habits and breaking bad ones, based on scientific research on behavior change.

Click for more info or to order

The Four Tendencies: The Indispensable Personality Profiles That Reveal How to Make Your Life Better (and Other People's Lives Better, Too)

by Gretchen Rubin

The Four Tendencies identifies four personality types and explains how understanding your own tendencies can help you improve your relationships, work habits, and overall happiness.

Click for more info or to order

Think Again: The Power of Knowing What You Don't Know

by Adam Grant

Think Again explores how people can change their minds and attitudes, and offers strategies for improving critical thinking and decision making.

Click for more info or to order

The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma

by Bessel van der Kolk

The Body Keeps the Score discusses the connection between trauma and physical health, and offers insights into how trauma can be treated and healed.

Click for more info or to order

The Psychology of Money: Timeless lessons on wealth, greed, and happiness

by Morgan Housel

The Psychology of Money examines the ways in which our attitudes and behaviors around money can shape our financial success and overall well-being.

Click for more info or to order