Research Data

Datasets and Codebook for “What I Think Others Think About Climate Change: Public Perceptions of Climate Change Beliefs Across 11 Countries”

Author(s) / Creator(s)

Geiger, Sandra J.

Other kind(s) of contributor

Köhler, Jana K.
Nijssen, Sari R. R.
White, Mathew P.

Abstract / Description

On average, Australians and Americans substantially overestimate the number of people who are skeptical about climate change. This example of a bias, known as pluralistic ignorance, reduces support for climate change policies and willingness to discuss climate change. A key factor in promoting proxies of climate action may thus lie in understanding whether pluralistic ignorance generalizes to other countries and whether interventions can reduce its potential negative consequences. In a 10-minute online experiment, we will assess actual and perceived climate change beliefs to test whether climate change-related pluralistic ignorance generalizes across 11 countries (Brazil, Canada, China, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Poland, and Thailand, N = 330 per country). We will then inform individuals about the actual distribution of climate change beliefs in their country, based on a representative survey in 2020 (YouGov Cambridge, 2020). Subsequently, we will investigate whether this disclosure intervention can increase certain outcomes associated with climate action in the believing majority in the experimental compared to the control condition. These outcomes include (a) expectations about others’ willingness to make lifestyle changes to mitigate climate change and others’ support for government action on climate change, (b) one’s own willingness to make lifestyle changes and one’s own support for government actions, (c) efficacy beliefs that citizens of one’s country can jointly prevent the negative consequences of climate change, and (d) willingness to express one’s opinion on climate change.

Keyword(s)

climate change pluralistic ignorance social consensus misperceptions social norms preregistration

Persistent Identifier

Date of first publication

2023-01-31

Temporal coverage

2022

Publisher

PsychArchives

Citation

  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Geiger, Sandra J.
  • Other kind(s) of contributor
    Köhler, Jana K.
  • Other kind(s) of contributor
    Nijssen, Sari R. R.
  • Other kind(s) of contributor
    White, Mathew P.
  • Temporal coverage
    2022
  • PsychArchives acquisition timestamp
    2023-01-31T09:21:57Z
  • Made available on
    2023-01-31T09:21:57Z
  • Date of first publication
    2023-01-31
  • Abstract / Description
    On average, Australians and Americans substantially overestimate the number of people who are skeptical about climate change. This example of a bias, known as pluralistic ignorance, reduces support for climate change policies and willingness to discuss climate change. A key factor in promoting proxies of climate action may thus lie in understanding whether pluralistic ignorance generalizes to other countries and whether interventions can reduce its potential negative consequences. In a 10-minute online experiment, we will assess actual and perceived climate change beliefs to test whether climate change-related pluralistic ignorance generalizes across 11 countries (Brazil, Canada, China, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Poland, and Thailand, N = 330 per country). We will then inform individuals about the actual distribution of climate change beliefs in their country, based on a representative survey in 2020 (YouGov Cambridge, 2020). Subsequently, we will investigate whether this disclosure intervention can increase certain outcomes associated with climate action in the believing majority in the experimental compared to the control condition. These outcomes include (a) expectations about others’ willingness to make lifestyle changes to mitigate climate change and others’ support for government action on climate change, (b) one’s own willingness to make lifestyle changes and one’s own support for government actions, (c) efficacy beliefs that citizens of one’s country can jointly prevent the negative consequences of climate change, and (d) willingness to express one’s opinion on climate change.
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  • Review status
    notReviewed
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  • Sponsorship
    Support for this research was provided by a ZPID preregistration grant.
    en
  • Table of contents
    11 raw data files: Brazil.csv, Canada.csv, China.csv, Germany.csv, India.csv, Indonesia.csv, Italy.csv, Japan.csv, Mexico.csv, Poland.csv, Thailand.csv 1 clean data file: data.csv
    en
  • Persistent Identifier
    https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/8038
  • Persistent Identifier
    https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.12499
  • Language of content
    eng
    en
  • Publisher
    PsychArchives
  • Is related to
    https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/6366
  • Keyword(s)
    climate change
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  • Keyword(s)
    pluralistic ignorance
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  • Keyword(s)
    social consensus
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  • Keyword(s)
    misperceptions
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  • Keyword(s)
    social norms
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  • Keyword(s)
    preregistration
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  • Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)
    150
  • Title
    Datasets and Codebook for “What I Think Others Think About Climate Change: Public Perceptions of Climate Change Beliefs Across 11 Countries”
    en
  • DRO type
    researchData
    en