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New research finds that misinformation on climate change can psychologically cancel out the influence of accurate statements. However, if legitimate facts are delivered with an 鈥渋noculation鈥 鈥 a warning dose of misinformation 鈥 some of the positive influence is preserved.听

There will always be people completely resistant to change, but we tend to find there is room for most people to change their minds, even just a little

Sander van der Linden

In medicine, vaccinating against a virus involves exposing a body to a weakened version of the threat, enough to build a tolerance.

Social psychologists believe that a similar logic can be applied to help 鈥渋noculate鈥 the public against misinformation, including the damaging influence of 鈥榝ake news鈥 websites propagating myths about climate change.

A new study compared reactions to a well-known climate change fact with those to a popular misinformation campaign. When presented consecutively, the false material completely cancelled out the accurate statement in people鈥檚 minds 鈥 opinions ended up back where they started.

Researchers then added a small dose of misinformation to delivery of the climate change fact, by briefly introducing people to distortion tactics used by certain groups. This 鈥渋noculation鈥 helped shift and hold opinions closer to the truth, despite the follow-up exposure to 鈥榝ake news鈥.听

探花直播study on US attitudes found the inoculation technique shifted the climate change opinions of Republicans, Independents and Democrats alike.

, the study was conducted by researchers from the universities of Cambridge, UK, Yale and George Mason, US. It is one of the first on 鈥榠noculation theory鈥 to try and replicate a 鈥榬eal world鈥 scenario of conflicting information on a highly politicised subject.听

鈥淢isinformation can be sticky, spreading and replicating like a virus,鈥 says lead author Dr Sander van der Linden, a social psychologist from the 探花直播 of Cambridge and Director of the Cambridge Social Decision-Making Lab.

鈥淲e wanted to see if we could find a 鈥榲accine鈥 by pre-emptively exposing people to a small amount of the type of misinformation they might experience. A warning that helps preserve the facts.

鈥 探花直播idea is to provide a cognitive repertoire that helps build up resistance to misinformation, so the next time people come across it they are less susceptible.鈥

Fact vs. Falsehood

To find the most compelling climate change falsehood currently influencing public opinion, van der Linden and colleagues tested popular statements from corners of the internet on a nationally representative sample of US citizens, with each one rated for familiarity and persuasiveness.

探花直播winner: the assertion that there is no consensus among scientists, apparently supported by the Oregon Global Warming Petition Project. This website claims to hold a petition signed by 鈥渙ver 31,000 American scientists鈥 stating there is no evidence that human CO2 release will cause climate change.

探花直播study also used the accurate statement that 鈥97% of scientists agree on manmade climate change鈥. by van der Linden has shown this fact about scientific consensus is an effective 鈥榞ateway鈥 for public acceptance of climate change.

In a disguised experiment, researchers tested the opposing statements on over 2,000 participants across the US spectrum of age, education, gender and politics using the online platform Amazon Mechanical Turk.

In order to gauge shifts in opinion, each participant was asked to estimate current levels of scientific agreement on climate change throughout the study.

Those shown only the fact about climate change consensus (in pie chart form) reported a large increase in perceived scientific agreement 鈥 an average of 20 percentage points. Those shown only misinformation (a screenshot of the Oregon petition website) dropped their belief in a scientific consensus by 9 percentage points.听

Some participants were shown the accurate pie chart followed by the erroneous Oregon petition. 探花直播researchers were surprised to find the two neutralised each other (a tiny difference of 0.5 percentage points).

鈥淚t鈥檚 uncomfortable to think that misinformation is so potent in our society,鈥 says van der Linden. 鈥淎 lot of people鈥檚 attitudes toward climate change aren鈥檛 very firm. They are aware there is a debate going on, but aren鈥檛 necessarily sure what to believe. Conflicting messages can leave them feeling back at square one.鈥

Psychological 'inoculation'

Alongside the consensus fact, two groups in the study were randomly given 鈥榲accines鈥:

  • A general inoculation, consisting of a warning that 鈥渟ome politically-motivated groups use misleading tactics to try and convince the public that there is a lot of disagreement among scientists鈥.
  • A detailed inoculation that picks apart the Oregon petition specifically. For example, by highlighting some of the signatories are fraudulent, such as Charles Darwin and members of the Spice Girls, and less than 1% of signatories have backgrounds in climate science.

For those 鈥榠noculated鈥 with this extra data, the misinformation that followed did not cancel out the accurate message.

探花直播general inoculation saw an average opinion shift of 6.5 percentage points towards acceptance of the climate science consensus, despite exposure to fake news.

When the detailed inoculation was added to the general, it was almost 13 percentage points 鈥 two-thirds of the effect seen when participants were just given the consensus fact.

探花直播research team point out that tobacco and fossil fuel companies have used psychological inoculation in the past to sow seeds of doubt, and to undermine scientific consensus in the public consciousness.

They say the latest study demonstrates that such techniques can be partially 鈥渞eversed鈥 to promote scientific consensus, and work in favour of the public good.

探花直播researchers also analysed the results in terms of political parties. Before inoculation, the fake negated the factual for both Democrats and Independents. For Republicans, the fake actually overrode the facts by 9 percentage points.

However, following inoculation, the positive effects of the accurate information were preserved across all parties to match the average findings (around a third with just general inoculation; two-thirds with detailed).

鈥淲e found that inoculation messages were equally effective in shifting the opinions of Republicans, Independents and Democrats in a direction consistent with the conclusions of climate science,鈥 says van der Linden.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 striking is that, on average, we found no backfire effect to inoculation messages among groups predisposed to reject climate science, they didn鈥檛 seem to retreat into conspiracy theories.

鈥淭here will always be people completely resistant to change, but we tend to find there is room for most people to change their minds, even just a little.鈥 听 听 听



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