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追踪公众对人为气候变化的看法。

Tracking Public Beliefs About Anthropogenic Climate Change.

作者信息

Hamilton Lawrence C, Hartter Joel, Lemcke-Stampone Mary, Moore David W, Safford Thomas G

机构信息

University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire, United States of America; Carsey School of Public Policy, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire, United States of America.

Carsey School of Public Policy, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire, United States of America; Environmental Studies Program, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2015 Sep 30;10(9):e0138208. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0138208. eCollection 2015.

Abstract

A simple question about climate change, with one choice designed to match consensus statements by scientists, was asked on 35 US nationwide, single-state or regional surveys from 2010 to 2015. Analysis of these data (over 28,000 interviews) yields robust and exceptionally well replicated findings on public beliefs about anthropogenic climate change, including regional variations, change over time, demographic bases, and the interacting effects of respondent education and political views. We find that more than half of the US public accepts the scientific consensus that climate change is happening now, caused mainly by human activities. A sizable, politically opposite minority (about 30 to 40%) concede the fact of climate change, but believe it has mainly natural causes. Few (about 10 to 15%) say they believe climate is not changing, or express no opinion. The overall proportions appear relatively stable nationwide, but exhibit place-to-place variations. Detailed analysis of 21 consecutive surveys within one fairly representative state (New Hampshire) finds a mild but statistically significant rise in agreement with the scientific consensus over 2010-2015. Effects from daily temperature are detectable but minor. Hurricane Sandy, which brushed New Hampshire but caused no disaster there, shows no lasting impact on that state's time series-suggesting that non-immediate weather disasters have limited effects. In all datasets political orientation dominates among individual-level predictors of climate beliefs, moderating the otherwise positive effects from education. Acceptance of anthropogenic climate change rises with education among Democrats and Independents, but not so among Republicans. The continuing series of surveys provides a baseline for tracking how future scientific, political, socioeconomic or climate developments impact public acceptance of the scientific consensus.

摘要

2010年至2015年期间,在美国全国、单一州或地区进行的35项调查中,提出了一个关于气候变化的简单问题,其中一个选项与科学家的共识声明相符。对这些数据(超过28000次访谈)的分析得出了关于公众对人为气候变化信念的有力且得到极好重复验证的结果,包括地区差异、随时间的变化、人口统计学基础,以及受访者教育程度和政治观点的相互作用影响。我们发现,超过一半的美国公众接受气候变化正在发生且主要由人类活动导致这一科学共识。有相当数量、政治立场相反的少数群体(约30%至40%)承认气候变化这一事实,但认为其主要是自然原因造成的。很少有人(约10%至15%)表示他们认为气候没有变化,或未表达意见。总体比例在全国范围内相对稳定,但存在地区差异。对一个具有相当代表性的州(新罕布什尔州)内连续21项调查的详细分析发现,在2010年至2015年期间,与科学共识相符的比例有轻微但在统计上显著的上升。每日气温的影响是可检测到的,但较小。掠过新罕布什尔州但未在当地造成灾难的桑迪飓风,对该州的时间序列没有显示出持久影响,这表明非直接的气象灾害影响有限。在所有数据集中,政治倾向在个人层面的气候信念预测因素中占主导地位,减弱了教育原本具有的积极影响。民主党人和无党派人士中,对人为气候变化的接受程度随教育程度提高而上升,但共和党人并非如此。这一系列持续的调查为追踪未来科学、政治、社会经济或气候发展如何影响公众对科学共识的接受程度提供了一个基线。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/7f57/4589389/6bbf45dd7382/pone.0138208.g001.jpg

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