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气候变化认知与行动中的动机性注意力

Motivated Attention in Climate Change Perception and Action.

作者信息

Luo Yu, Zhao Jiaying

机构信息

Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.

Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.

出版信息

Front Psychol. 2019 Jul 16;10:1541. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01541. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Despite the scientific consensus, some people still remain skeptical about climate change. In fact, there is a growing partisan divide over the last decade within the United States in the support for climate policies. Given the same climate evidence, why do some people become concerned while others remain unconvinced? Here we propose a motivated attention framework where socio-political motivations shape visual attention to climate evidence, altering perceptions of the evidence and subsequent actions to mitigate climate change. To seek support for this framework, we conducted three experiments. Participants viewed a graph of annual global temperature change while they were eyetracked and estimated the average change. We found that political orientation may bias attention to climate change evidence, altering the perception of the same evidence (Experiment 1). We further examined how attentional biases influence subsequent actions to mitigate climate change. We found that liberals were more likely to sign a climate petition or more willing to donate to an environmental organization than conservatives, and attention guides climate actions in different ways for liberals and conservatives (Experiment 2). To seek causal evidence, we biased attention to different parts of the temperature curve by coloring stronger climate evidence in red or weak climate evidence in red. We found that liberals were more likely to sign the petition or more willing to donate when stronger evidence was in red, but conservatives were less likely to act when stronger evidence was in red (Experiment 3). This suggests that drawing attention to motivationally consistent information increases actions in liberals, but discouraged conservatives. The findings provide initial preliminary evidence for the motivated attention framework, suggesting an attentional divide between liberals and conservatives in the perception of climate evidence. This divide might further reinforce prior beliefs about climate change, creating further polarization. The current study raises a possible attentional mechanism for ideologically motivated reasoning and its impact on basic perceptual processes. It also provides implications for the communication of climate science to different socio-political groups with the goal of mobilizing actions on climate change.

摘要

尽管科学界已达成共识,但仍有一些人对气候变化持怀疑态度。事实上,在过去十年里,美国国内在支持气候政策方面的党派分歧日益增大。面对同样的气候证据,为什么有些人会担忧,而另一些人却不为所动呢?在此,我们提出一个动机性注意力框架,即社会政治动机塑造了对气候证据的视觉注意力,改变了对证据的认知以及随后为缓解气候变化而采取的行动。为了寻求对这一框架的支持,我们进行了三项实验。参与者在接受眼动追踪时观看了一张全球年度气温变化图,并估计平均变化情况。我们发现,政治倾向可能会使对气候变化证据的注意力产生偏差,从而改变对同一证据的认知(实验1)。我们进一步研究了注意力偏差如何影响随后为缓解气候变化而采取的行动。我们发现,与保守派相比,自由派更有可能签署气候请愿书或更愿意向环保组织捐款,而且注意力以不同方式引导自由派和保守派采取气候行动(实验2)。为了寻找因果证据,我们通过将更强的气候证据涂成红色或较弱的气候证据涂成红色,使注意力偏向温度曲线的不同部分。我们发现,当更强的证据为红色时,自由派更有可能签署请愿书或更愿意捐款,但当更强的证据为红色时,保守派采取行动的可能性较小(实验3)。这表明,将注意力吸引到动机一致的信息上会增加自由派的行动,但会使保守派却步。这些发现为动机性注意力框架提供了初步证据,表明自由派和保守派在对气候证据的认知上存在注意力差异。这种差异可能会进一步强化先前对气候变化的看法,导致进一步的两极分化。当前的研究提出了一种可能的注意力机制,用于解释出于意识形态动机的推理及其对基本感知过程的影响。它还为向不同社会政治群体传播气候科学知识以推动气候变化行动提供了启示。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/c964/6660247/0fe9766dc1d7/fpsyg-10-01541-g001.jpg

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