Carlson Shelby C, Dietsch Alia M, Slagle Kristina M, Bruskotter Jeremy T
School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Conserv Biol. 2023 Apr;37(2):e14003. doi: 10.1111/cobi.14003. Epub 2022 Nov 27.
As conservation scholars increasingly recognize the critical role of human thought and behavior in determining the persistence of biodiversity across the globe, a growing line of inquiry regarding the validity and comparability of previous applications of core psychological concepts has emerged. Specifically, inconsistent measurement and use of terms, such as attitudes and acceptance, reveal important questions about previous approaches. Given that these concepts differ by definition, yet have been used interchangeably, we explored what drives differences in people's responses when each concept is operationalized in the context of a contested wildlife species, the gray wolf (Canis lupus). To do so, we used data from a 2014 survey of U.S. residents (n = 1287) to test how measures of six concepts (i.e., acceptance, attitudes, benefits, risks, [prior] behavior, and behavioral intentions) often employed in the conservation social sciences were related with a broad set of possible explanatory variables. Despite moderate to strong correlations between all concepts measured (| Pearson's r | = 0.39-0.65, p < 0.001), results revealed considerable variation in their respective relationships with identical explanatory variables. Specifically, although wildlife value orientation (i.e., domination or mutualism) operated fairly consistently across cognitive and behavioral concepts, the relationship between the six concepts and other factors, such as social trust, identification with various interest groups (i.e., hunter, farmer, or rancher, environmentalist, and animal rights advocate), and political ideology (i.e., liberal vs. conservative), varied considerably. Our findings underscore that differences exist in these measures, which could have serious implications for conservationists integrating social science findings in their decision-making processes if they are unaware of the theoretical underpinnings of and distinctions between core psychological concepts.
随着保护学者越来越认识到人类思想和行为在决定全球生物多样性持久性方面的关键作用,关于核心心理学概念先前应用的有效性和可比性的一系列探究日益兴起。具体而言,诸如态度和接受度等术语的测量和使用不一致,揭示了关于先前方法的重要问题。鉴于这些概念在定义上有所不同,但却被交替使用,我们探讨了在有争议的野生动物物种灰狼(Canis lupus)的背景下,当每个概念被操作化时,是什么驱动了人们反应的差异。为此,我们使用了2014年对美国居民(n = 1287)的调查数据,来测试保护社会科学中经常使用的六个概念(即接受度、态度、益处、风险、[先前]行为和行为意图)的测量与一系列广泛的可能解释变量之间的关系。尽管所测量的所有概念之间存在中度到强的相关性(|皮尔逊r| = 0.39 - 0.65,p < 0.001),但结果显示它们与相同解释变量的各自关系存在相当大的差异。具体来说,尽管野生动物价值取向(即支配或共生)在认知和行为概念中运作相当一致,但这六个概念与其他因素(如社会信任、对各种利益集团的认同(即猎人、农民或牧场主、环保主义者和动物权利倡导者)以及政治意识形态(即自由派与保守派))之间的关系差异很大。我们的研究结果强调了这些测量方法存在差异,如果保护主义者在决策过程中整合社会科学研究结果时没有意识到核心心理学概念的理论基础和区别,这可能会对他们产生严重影响。