Sampling and processing of climate change information and disinformation across three diverse countries

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Sampling and processing of climate change information and disinformation across three diverse countries. / Rahmani Azad, Zahra; Spampatti, Tobia; Gluth, Sebastian et al.
In: British Journal of Psychology, 2025.

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@article{7e5b9eb30fb1429aaa2879d8aa31e92b,
title = "Sampling and processing of climate change information and disinformation across three diverse countries",
abstract = "In the media, accurate climate information and climate disinformation often coexist and present competing narratives about climate change. Whereas previous research documented detrimental effects of disinformation on climate beliefs, little is known about how people seek climate-related content and how this varies between cross-cultural contexts. In a preregistered experiment, we studied how individuals sequentially sample and process Pro- and Anti-climate statements across 15 rounds. Participants from the United States, China, and Germany (Ntotal = 2226) freely sampled real-world climate-related statements, retrieved from Twitter and validated in previous studies. Overall, reading both Pro- and Anti-climate statements influenced climate concern in all countries. Participants preferred statements that were better aligned with their initial climate beliefs, and this confirmatory tendency intensified the more information had been sampled. Moreover, participants' confirmatory evaluation (i.e., accepting aligned and rejecting opposing messages) increased over time. While climate concern was mostly stable, in the United States, climate concern levels and box choices mutually reinforced each other, leading to greater polarization within the sample over the course of the experiment. The paradigm offers new perspectives on how people process and navigate conflicting narratives about climate change.",
keywords = "climate action, climate policies, confirmation bias, disinformation, information sampling, Business psychology",
author = "{Rahmani Azad}, Zahra and Tobia Spampatti and Sebastian Gluth and Tam, {Kim Pong} and Hahnel, {Ulf J.J.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2025 The Author(s). British Journal of Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The British Psychological Society.",
year = "2025",
doi = "10.1111/bjop.70028",
language = "English",
journal = "British Journal of Psychology",
issn = "0007-1269",
publisher = "John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sampling and processing of climate change information and disinformation across three diverse countries

AU - Rahmani Azad, Zahra

AU - Spampatti, Tobia

AU - Gluth, Sebastian

AU - Tam, Kim Pong

AU - Hahnel, Ulf J.J.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2025 The Author(s). British Journal of Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The British Psychological Society.

PY - 2025

Y1 - 2025

N2 - In the media, accurate climate information and climate disinformation often coexist and present competing narratives about climate change. Whereas previous research documented detrimental effects of disinformation on climate beliefs, little is known about how people seek climate-related content and how this varies between cross-cultural contexts. In a preregistered experiment, we studied how individuals sequentially sample and process Pro- and Anti-climate statements across 15 rounds. Participants from the United States, China, and Germany (Ntotal = 2226) freely sampled real-world climate-related statements, retrieved from Twitter and validated in previous studies. Overall, reading both Pro- and Anti-climate statements influenced climate concern in all countries. Participants preferred statements that were better aligned with their initial climate beliefs, and this confirmatory tendency intensified the more information had been sampled. Moreover, participants' confirmatory evaluation (i.e., accepting aligned and rejecting opposing messages) increased over time. While climate concern was mostly stable, in the United States, climate concern levels and box choices mutually reinforced each other, leading to greater polarization within the sample over the course of the experiment. The paradigm offers new perspectives on how people process and navigate conflicting narratives about climate change.

AB - In the media, accurate climate information and climate disinformation often coexist and present competing narratives about climate change. Whereas previous research documented detrimental effects of disinformation on climate beliefs, little is known about how people seek climate-related content and how this varies between cross-cultural contexts. In a preregistered experiment, we studied how individuals sequentially sample and process Pro- and Anti-climate statements across 15 rounds. Participants from the United States, China, and Germany (Ntotal = 2226) freely sampled real-world climate-related statements, retrieved from Twitter and validated in previous studies. Overall, reading both Pro- and Anti-climate statements influenced climate concern in all countries. Participants preferred statements that were better aligned with their initial climate beliefs, and this confirmatory tendency intensified the more information had been sampled. Moreover, participants' confirmatory evaluation (i.e., accepting aligned and rejecting opposing messages) increased over time. While climate concern was mostly stable, in the United States, climate concern levels and box choices mutually reinforced each other, leading to greater polarization within the sample over the course of the experiment. The paradigm offers new perspectives on how people process and navigate conflicting narratives about climate change.

KW - climate action

KW - climate policies

KW - confirmation bias

KW - disinformation

KW - information sampling

KW - Business psychology

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105018179905&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1111/bjop.70028

DO - 10.1111/bjop.70028

M3 - Journal articles

C2 - 40999711

AN - SCOPUS:105018179905

JO - British Journal of Psychology

JF - British Journal of Psychology

SN - 0007-1269

ER -

DOI