Are Places Where People Feel Safe or Unsafe Similar to Spatial Crime Patterns? Extracting
the Collective Truth of the Spatial Crime Perception Gap Using Digital Sketch Maps
This study examines the spatial crime perception gap (SCPG), the mismatch between
perceived and actual crime, which can lead to unnecessary avoidance behaviors, anxiety,
or lack of vigilance. While few studies have explored this phenomenon from a spatial
perspective, this research analyses the collective spatial perception of safety and
unsafety in Vienna and Budapest and compares them with recorded crime patterns. Using
a digital sketch map survey tool, 656 participants identified safe and unsafe areas
as well as their daily routes. The responses were analyzed using spatial analytical
and statistical methods to delineate the perception gaps in space, which were also
diversified by crime type aggregations, including all crimes, violent crimes, property
crimes, and visible crimes. Distance-based analyses were also conducted to examine
the “spatial diffusion” and “spatial endowment” effects. The results show that many
areas that are perceived as unsafe are not statistical crime hotspots. Perception
aligns more closely with violent crime patterns than with property or visible crimes.
The spatial diffusion effect illustrates that crime hotspots may influence and expand
the perception of unsafety in adjacent and nearby areas. The spatial endowment effect
suggests that people are more likely to perceive an area as unsafe if it is further
away from their activity spaces, while overlooking crime hotspots that may intersect
with it. These patterns were consistent across both cities, although the perception
gap was larger in Budapest, while the endowment effect was more pronounced in Vienna.
By highlighting where and how perception diverges from reality, this study provides
insights that can inform strategies to reduce unfounded fear and strengthen the perceived
safety and psychological resilience of urban populations.