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#climateapathy — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #climateapathy, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Scientists just found a way to break through #ClimateApathy

    In a field of muddy results, it's among the clearest findings that one cognitive scientist has seen in his career.

    Kate Yoder
    May 05, 2025

    Excerpt: "Liu worked with professors at Princeton to test how people responded to two different graphs. One showed winter temperatures of a fictional town gradually rising over time, while the other presented the same warming trend in a black-or-white manner: The lake either froze in any given year, or it didn’t. People who saw the second chart perceived #ClimateChange as causing more abrupt changes.

    "Both charts represent the same amount of winter warming, just presented differently. 'We are not hoodwinking people,' said Rachit Dubey, a co-author of the study who’s now a professor of communications at the University of California, Los Angeles. 'We are literally showing them the same trend, just in different formats.' "

    Read more / listen:
    grist.org/science/break-throug

    #DataVisualizations #Climate #ClimateStripes #GlobalWarming #ClimateData

  2. Scientists just found a way to break through #ClimateApathy

    In a field of muddy results, it's among the clearest findings that one cognitive scientist has seen in his career.

    Kate Yoder
    May 05, 2025

    Excerpt: "Liu worked with professors at Princeton to test how people responded to two different graphs. One showed winter temperatures of a fictional town gradually rising over time, while the other presented the same warming trend in a black-or-white manner: The lake either froze in any given year, or it didn’t. People who saw the second chart perceived #ClimateChange as causing more abrupt changes.

    "Both charts represent the same amount of winter warming, just presented differently. 'We are not hoodwinking people,' said Rachit Dubey, a co-author of the study who’s now a professor of communications at the University of California, Los Angeles. 'We are literally showing them the same trend, just in different formats.' "

    Read more / listen:
    grist.org/science/break-throug

    #DataVisualizations #Climate #ClimateStripes #GlobalWarming #ClimateData

  3. Scientists just found a way to break through #ClimateApathy

    In a field of muddy results, it's among the clearest findings that one cognitive scientist has seen in his career.

    Kate Yoder
    May 05, 2025

    Excerpt: "Liu worked with professors at Princeton to test how people responded to two different graphs. One showed winter temperatures of a fictional town gradually rising over time, while the other presented the same warming trend in a black-or-white manner: The lake either froze in any given year, or it didn’t. People who saw the second chart perceived #ClimateChange as causing more abrupt changes.

    "Both charts represent the same amount of winter warming, just presented differently. 'We are not hoodwinking people,' said Rachit Dubey, a co-author of the study who’s now a professor of communications at the University of California, Los Angeles. 'We are literally showing them the same trend, just in different formats.' "

    Read more / listen:
    grist.org/science/break-throug

    #DataVisualizations #Climate #ClimateStripes #GlobalWarming #ClimateData

  4. Scientists just found a way to break through #ClimateApathy

    In a field of muddy results, it's among the clearest findings that one cognitive scientist has seen in his career.

    Kate Yoder
    May 05, 2025

    Excerpt: "Liu worked with professors at Princeton to test how people responded to two different graphs. One showed winter temperatures of a fictional town gradually rising over time, while the other presented the same warming trend in a black-or-white manner: The lake either froze in any given year, or it didn’t. People who saw the second chart perceived #ClimateChange as causing more abrupt changes.

    "Both charts represent the same amount of winter warming, just presented differently. 'We are not hoodwinking people,' said Rachit Dubey, a co-author of the study who’s now a professor of communications at the University of California, Los Angeles. 'We are literally showing them the same trend, just in different formats.' "

    Read more / listen:
    grist.org/science/break-throug

    #DataVisualizations #Climate #ClimateStripes #GlobalWarming #ClimateData

  5. Scientists just found a way to break through #ClimateApathy

    In a field of muddy results, it's among the clearest findings that one cognitive scientist has seen in his career.

    Kate Yoder
    May 05, 2025

    Excerpt: "Liu worked with professors at Princeton to test how people responded to two different graphs. One showed winter temperatures of a fictional town gradually rising over time, while the other presented the same warming trend in a black-or-white manner: The lake either froze in any given year, or it didn’t. People who saw the second chart perceived #ClimateChange as causing more abrupt changes.

    "Both charts represent the same amount of winter warming, just presented differently. 'We are not hoodwinking people,' said Rachit Dubey, a co-author of the study who’s now a professor of communications at the University of California, Los Angeles. 'We are literally showing them the same trend, just in different formats.' "

    Read more / listen:
    grist.org/science/break-throug

    #DataVisualizations #Climate #ClimateStripes #GlobalWarming #ClimateData