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Cooperative phenotype predicts climate change belief and pro-environmental behaviour. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding the psychological factors influencing climate change beliefs and pro-environmental behaviors is crucial for social science research.
  • The study examines the "cooperative phenotype," which describes a tendency to cooperate in situations where individual and group interests conflict, and how it correlates with climate attitudes among a representative sample of New Zealanders.
  • Results indicate that individuals with a strong cooperative phenotype are more likely to believe in climate change and engage in environmentally friendly behaviors, suggesting that similar psychological mechanisms operate in both small and large social dilemmas.

Article Abstract

Understanding the psychological causes of variation in climate change belief and pro-environmental behaviour remains an urgent challenge for the social sciences. The "cooperative phenotype" is a stable psychological preference for cooperating in social dilemmas that involve a tension between individual and collective interest. Since climate change poses a social dilemma on a global scale, this issue may evoke similar psychological processes as smaller social dilemmas. Here, we investigate the relationships between the cooperative phenotype and climate change belief and behaviour with a representative sample of New Zealanders (N = 897). By linking behaviour in a suite of economic games to self-reported climate attitudes, we show robust positive associations between the cooperative phenotype and both climate change belief and pro-environmental behaviour. Furthermore, our structural equation models support a motivated reasoning account in which the relationship between the cooperative phenotype and pro-environmental behaviour is mediated by climate change belief. These findings suggest that common psychological mechanisms underlie cooperation in both micro-scale social dilemmas and larger-scale social dilemmas like climate change.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9325867PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-16937-2DOI Listing

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