Deryugina Tatyana, Shurchkov Olga
Department of Finance, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, IL, United States of America.
Department of Economics, Wellesley College, Wellesley, MA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Apr 11;11(4):e0151469. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0151469. eCollection 2016.
Despite over 20 years of research and scientific consensus on the topic, climate change continues to be a politically polarizing issue. We conducted a survey experiment to test whether providing the public with information on the exact extent of scientific agreement about the occurrence and causes of climate change affects respondents' own beliefs and bridges the divide between conservatives and liberals. First, we show that the public significantly underestimated the extent of the scientific consensus. We then find that those given concrete information about scientists' views were more likely to report believing that climate change was already underway and that it was caused by humans. However, their beliefs about the necessity of making policy decisions and their willingness to donate money to combat climate change were not affected. Information provision affected liberals, moderates, and conservatives similarly, implying that the gap in beliefs between liberals and conservatives is not likely to be bridged by information treatments similar to the one we study. Finally, we conducted a 6-month follow-up with respondents to see if the treatment effect persisted; the results were statistically inconclusive.
尽管在这个话题上已经进行了20多年的研究并达成了科学共识,但气候变化仍然是一个在政治上两极分化的问题。我们进行了一项调查实验,以测试向公众提供有关气候变化发生和成因的科学共识的确切程度的信息是否会影响受访者自己的信念,并弥合保守派和自由派之间的分歧。首先,我们表明公众大大低估了科学共识的程度。然后我们发现,那些获得了有关科学家观点的具体信息的人更有可能报告相信气候变化已经在发生并且是由人类造成的。然而,他们对做出政策决策的必要性的信念以及他们为应对气候变化捐款的意愿并未受到影响。提供信息对自由派、温和派和保守派的影响类似,这意味着自由派和保守派之间的信念差距不太可能通过与我们所研究的类似的信息处理来弥合。最后,我们对受访者进行了为期6个月的跟踪调查,以查看治疗效果是否持续;结果在统计学上没有定论。