Dataset for: A "front-row seat" to catastrophe: Testing the effect of immersive technologies on sympathy and pro-environmental behavior in the context of rising sea levels
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Ditrich, Lara
Lachmair, Martin
Abstract / Description
For 63% of the world's population living farther than 100km (60 miles) from the coast, rising sea levels due to climate change represent a distal, abstract problem that might not appear to require urgent action. This poses a challenge to environmental educators seeking to foster pro-environmental responses. We tested if and how using immersive digital technologies like virtual reality (VR) can aid educators in overcoming this challenge.
Participants in our experiment (N = 146) viewed a report on how rising sea levels affect contemporary Fijians either in high immersive VR (360° video in a head-mounted display) or in low immersive VR (360° video on a traditional computer screen). Pro-environmental intentions did not differ between the experimental conditions. However, perceived presence, a sense of "being there", was higher in the high immersion condition than in the low immersion condition. Presence, in turn, correlated positively with pro-environmental intentions and sympathy but not problem awareness. This suggests that environmental education on rising sea levels aimed at promoting pro-environmental intentions might benefit from creating a heightened perception of presence.
Persistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2025-01-17
Publisher
PsychArchives
Citation
Ditrich, L., & Lachmair, M. (in press). A "front-row seat" to catastrophe: Testing the effect of immersive technologies on sympathy and pro-environmental behavior in the context of rising sea levels. Environmental Education Research.
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Ditrich&Lachmair_AnonymizedDataset_Codebook.csvUnknown - 11.38KBMD5: 55bb3b6ce7eb38c11d1fa62f1b8c9f19Description: Codebook to dataset
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Ditrich&Lachmair_AnonymizedDataset_Data.csvUnknown - 25.73KBMD5: 9ee73674a1e6d24a82ef4865e9747487Description: Dataset (anonymized)
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There are no other versions of this object.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Ditrich, Lara
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Lachmair, Martin
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2025-01-17T14:05:37Z
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Made available on2025-01-17T14:05:37Z
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Date of first publication2025-01-17
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Abstract / DescriptionFor 63% of the world's population living farther than 100km (60 miles) from the coast, rising sea levels due to climate change represent a distal, abstract problem that might not appear to require urgent action. This poses a challenge to environmental educators seeking to foster pro-environmental responses. We tested if and how using immersive digital technologies like virtual reality (VR) can aid educators in overcoming this challenge. Participants in our experiment (N = 146) viewed a report on how rising sea levels affect contemporary Fijians either in high immersive VR (360° video in a head-mounted display) or in low immersive VR (360° video on a traditional computer screen). Pro-environmental intentions did not differ between the experimental conditions. However, perceived presence, a sense of "being there", was higher in the high immersion condition than in the low immersion condition. Presence, in turn, correlated positively with pro-environmental intentions and sympathy but not problem awareness. This suggests that environmental education on rising sea levels aimed at promoting pro-environmental intentions might benefit from creating a heightened perception of presence.en
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Review statusunknown
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CitationDitrich, L., & Lachmair, M. (in press). A "front-row seat" to catastrophe: Testing the effect of immersive technologies on sympathy and pro-environmental behavior in the context of rising sea levels. Environmental Education Research.
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/11362
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.15947
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Language of contenteng
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PublisherPsychArchives
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Is related tohttps://www.psycharchives.org/handle/20.500.12034/11363
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleDataset for: A "front-row seat" to catastrophe: Testing the effect of immersive technologies on sympathy and pro-environmental behavior in the context of rising sea levelsen
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DRO typeresearchData
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Leibniz institute name(s) / abbreviation(s)IWM