van der Linden Sander, Leiserowitz Anthony, Rosenthal Seth, Maibach Edward
Department of Psychology University of Cambridge Cambridge UK CB2 3EB UK.
Yale Program on Climate Change Communication Yale University New Haven CT 06511 USA.
Glob Chall. 2017 Jan 23;1(2):1600008. doi: 10.1002/gch2.201600008. eCollection 2017 Feb 27.
Effectively addressing climate change requires significant changes in individual and collective human behavior and decision-making. Yet, in light of the increasing politicization of (climate) science, and the attempts of vested-interest groups to undermine the scientific consensus on climate change through organized "disinformation campaigns," identifying ways to effectively engage with the public about the issue across the political spectrum has proven difficult. A growing body of research suggests that one promising way to counteract the politicization of science is to convey the high level of normative agreement ("consensus") among experts about the reality of human-caused climate change. Yet, much prior research examining public opinion dynamics in the context of climate change has done so under conditions with limited external validity. Moreover, no research to date has examined how to protect the public from the spread of influential misinformation about climate change. The current research bridges this divide by exploring how people evaluate and process consensus cues in a polarized information environment. Furthermore, evidence is provided that it is possible to pre-emptively protect ("inoculate") public attitudes about climate change against real-world misinformation.
有效应对气候变化需要人类个体和集体行为及决策发生重大改变。然而,鉴于(气候)科学政治化程度日益加深,以及既得利益集团试图通过有组织的“虚假信息运动”破坏关于气候变化的科学共识,事实证明,找到能在整个政治光谱范围内让公众有效参与该问题讨论的方法很困难。越来越多的研究表明,抵消科学政治化的一个有前景的方法是传达专家们对人为气候变化现实达成的高度规范性共识。然而,此前许多在气候变化背景下研究公众舆论动态的研究,都是在外部效度有限的条件下进行的。此外,迄今为止,尚无研究探讨如何保护公众免受关于气候变化的有影响力的错误信息传播的影响。当前的研究通过探索人们在两极分化的信息环境中如何评估和处理共识线索,弥合了这一差距。此外,有证据表明,可以预先保护(“接种”)公众对气候变化的态度,使其免受现实世界错误信息的影响。