Department of Social and Decision Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University.
J Exp Psychol Gen. 2017 Feb;146(2):286-304. doi: 10.1037/xge0000260.
Understanding how the public perceives uncertainty in scientific research is fundamental for effective communication about research and its inevitable uncertainty. Previous work found that scientific evidence differentially influenced beliefs from individuals with different political ideologies. Evidence that threatens an individual's political ideology is perceived as more uncertain than nonthreatening evidence. The authors present 3 studies examining perceptions of scientific uncertainty more broadly by including sciences that are not politically polarizing. Study 1 develops scales measuring perceptions of scientific uncertainty. It finds (a) 3 perceptual dimensions of scientific uncertainty, with the primary dimension representing a perception of precision; (b) the precision dimension of uncertainty is strongly associated with the perceived value of a research field; and (c) differences in perceived uncertainty across political affiliations. Study 2 manipulated these dimensions, finding that Republicans were more sensitive than Democrats to descriptions of uncertainty associated with a research field (e.g., psychology). Study 3 found that these views of a research field did not extend to the evaluation of individual results produced by the field. Together, these studies show that perceptions of scientific uncertainty associated with entire research fields are valid predictors of abstract perceptions of scientific quality, benefit, and allocation of funding. Yet, they do not inform judgments about individual results. Therefore, polarization in the acceptance of specific results is not likely due to individual differences in perceived scientific uncertainty. Further, the direction of influence potentially could be reversed, such that perceived quality of scientific results could be used to influence perceptions about scientific research fields. (PsycINFO Database Record
了解公众如何看待科学研究中的不确定性对于有效沟通研究及其不可避免的不确定性至关重要。先前的研究发现,科学证据会对具有不同政治意识形态的个体的信念产生不同的影响。威胁个人政治意识形态的证据被认为比非威胁性证据更不确定。作者通过纳入非政治极化的科学领域,提出了 3 项研究来更广泛地研究对科学不确定性的看法。研究 1 开发了衡量对科学不确定性看法的量表。它发现:(a)科学不确定性有 3 个感知维度,主要维度代表对精度的感知;(b)不确定性的精度维度与研究领域的感知价值密切相关;(c)政治信仰差异导致不确定性感知的差异。研究 2 操纵了这些维度,发现共和党人比民主党人对与研究领域(例如心理学)相关的不确定性描述更为敏感。研究 3 发现,对研究领域的这些看法并不适用于对该领域产生的个别结果的评估。这些研究共同表明,对整个研究领域的科学不确定性的看法是对科学质量、收益和资金分配的抽象看法的有效预测指标。然而,它们并不能为对个别结果的判断提供信息。因此,对特定结果的接受的两极化不太可能是由于对科学不确定性的个人看法的差异造成的。此外,影响的方向可能会反转,即科学结果的感知质量可以用来影响对科学研究领域的看法。