8 Comments

  1. I’ve linked to the news release in the post above. In this comment, for those interested, here’s the link to the peer reviewed journal article:

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0272494424001828

    From the linked article:

    As global temperatures continue to rise, so too does the urgency of understanding how people form their beliefs about climate change. A recent study published in the Journal of Environmental Psychology explores a link between personal experiences of temperature anomalies and the likelihood of believing in climate change conspiracy theories. The findings indicate that people who experience hotter-than-usual temperatures are less likely to believe in climate change conspiracy theories.

    The study involved 1,003 adults from the United States and 1,000 adults from mainland China. Participants were surveyed twice: first in late August and early September 2022, after experiencing the summer, and again in early January 2023, following the winter season. This timing enabled the researchers to capture the participants’ experiences of temperature anomalies during two distinct seasons.

    The researchers found that participants who perceived their summer as being hotter than usual were less likely to believe in climate change conspiracy theories, both at the time of the survey and several months later. This suggests that when people experience weather anomalies firsthand, they may become more skeptical of the idea that climate change is a hoax. This effect was particularly strong among participants in the United States.

    The researchers also explored how psychological distance—the perceived proximity of climate change—played a role in shaping beliefs. They found that participants who felt that climate change was closer to them geographically, socially, or temporally (in the near future) were less likely to believe in climate change conspiracy theories.

    This perception of proximity appeared to mediate the relationship between experiencing a hotter summer and reduced belief in conspiracy theories. In other words, when people felt that climate change was directly affecting them, they were more likely to reject the idea that it was a hoax.

  2. I’m sure there are also enough old boomer farts still in denial with their cosy multi-thousand dollar airco home-installations, who also never go anywhere without blasting the airco in their massive gass guzzling SUV’s.

  3. I wonder if southerners or those in hotter parts of the world are more prone to deny climate change. Generally speaking, it’s just hot down here. If it is marginally hotter than normal, such is life. I could see how any explanation which resolves to culpability may fall on more deaf ears when the alternative explanation is simply “that’s living in the South.”

  4. Disaster_Mouse on

    People whose faces were eaten by leopards were less likely to believe that there are no leopards, and that the leopards had no desire to eat faces.

  5. Hard to believe that experiencing a thing makes that thing easier to believe – I hope someone funds a study into this!

  6. This isn’t new. This was studied at least 20 years ago. The effect is even seen if the hotter/colder temperatures were just because someone adjusted the thermostat in the testing room.

  7. I’m having trouble parsing the paper because I’m not accustomed to wordy psychology literature and I don’t understand the way they’ve presented the data in tables and multiple models and not just used graphs, also it’s 22:45

    Was the effect they observed meaningfully large (i.e the psych equivalent of clinically significant)?

    Were there any subgroup analyses to see if there are particular demographic features that exhibit more/less likelihood of accepting climate change?

    What were the actual numbers of people who believed climate change to be a hoax at the first time point?

  8. So… They’re just as ignorant as people who think it’s a hoax because they experience colder than usual temperatures.

    I feel like we shouldn’t celebrate people arriving on the right side of an issue for stupid reasons. That stupidity can turn around to bite us in the ass later on.

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