November 29, 2017
Climate change discussions on social media
are very influential. A new study in BioScience shows that when it
comes to iconic topics such as polar bears and retreating sea ice, climate
blogs fall into two distinct camps with little or no overlap between deniers
and the available scientific facts. The study's first author, NIOO-KNAW
researcher Jeff Harvey says, "It's time for scientists to counter the
misinformation and engage directly with the public far more."
Polar bears and retreating sea ice have
become iconic symbols of the polarised climate change debate. By
focusing on these subjects, deniers of human-caused global warming cast doubt
among the public about the entire body of climate change knowledge. But a new
study of the underlying science used in the debate could well melt down the trustworthiness
of these deniers on social
media.
"We found a major gap between the facts
from scientific literature and the science-based blogs on the one hand, and the
opinions aired in climate change-denying blogs on the other," says Harvey.
"It's a very dangerous gap, as these blogs are read by millions."
The researchers analysed 90 climate blogs in
total, alongside 92 scientific papers on the subject. Although 45 'denier
blogs' claim to be based on science, they failed to overlap with the
peer-reviewed evidence in the papers. Instead, they relied mostly on other
denier blogs. And 80 percent relied on one blog in particular, whose author,
says Harvey, "had neither conducted any original research nor published
any articles in the peer-reviewed literature on polar bears."
By contrast, 45 truly science-based blogs do
match the evidence in the scientific papers. And there's not much middle
ground.
The team that studied the blogs was
international and multidisciplinary, including ecologists, polar bear
researchers, climate scientists,
science communicators and psychologists of various ages from six countries.
Among the authors are well-known scientists such as Steven Amstrup from Polar
Bears International, Eric Post from the University of California, Davis, and
Michael Mann from Pennsylvania State University.
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