How the experience of California wildfires shape Twitter climate change framings

IF 4.8 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Jessie W. Y. Ko, Shengquan Ni, Alexander Taylor, Xiusi Chen, Yicong Huang, Avinash Kumar, Sadeem Alsudais, Zuozhi Wang, Xiaozhen Liu, Wei Wang, Chen Li, Suellen Hopfer
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Abstract

Climate communication scientists search for effective message strategies to engage the ambivalent public in support of climate advocacy. The personal experience of wildfire is expected to render climate change impacts more concretely, pointing to a potential message strategy to engage the public. This study examined Twitter discourse related to climate change during the onset of 20 wildfires in California between the years 2017 and 2021. In this mixed method study, we analyzed tweets geographically and temporally proximal to the occurrence of wildfires to discover framings and examined how frequencies in climate framings changed before and after fires. Results identified three predominant climate framings: linking wildfire to climate change, suggesting climate actions, and attributing climate change to adversities besides wildfires. Mean tweet frequencies linking wildfire to climate change and attributing adversities increased significantly after the onset of fire. While suggesting climate action tweets also increased, the increase was not statistically significant. Temporal analysis of tweet frequencies for the three themes of tweets showed that discussion increased after the onset of a fire but persisted typically no more than 2 weeks. For fires that burned for longer periods of more than a month, external events triggered climate discussions. Our findings contribute to identifying how the personal experience of wildfire shapes Twitter discussion related to climate change, and how these framings change over time during wildfire events, leading to insights into critical time points after wildfire for implementing message strategies to increase public engagement on climate change impacts and policy.

Abstract Image

加州野火的经历如何塑造 Twitter 的气候变化框架
气候传播科学家正在寻找有效的信息策略,以吸引矛盾的公众支持气候宣传。野火的亲身经历有望使气候变化的影响更加具体化,从而为吸引公众参与提供了一种潜在的信息策略。本研究考察了 2017 年至 2021 年加州 20 场野火发生期间推特上与气候变化相关的言论。在这项混合方法研究中,我们从地理和时间上分析了与野火发生时间相近的推文,以发现框架,并研究了火灾发生前后气候框架的频率是如何变化的。结果发现了三种主要的气候框架:将野火与气候变化联系起来、建议采取气候行动以及将气候变化归因于野火以外的不利因素。火灾发生后,将野火与气候变化联系起来以及将逆境归因于气候变化的平均推文频率显著增加。虽然建议采取气候行动的推文也有所增加,但增加幅度在统计上并不显著。对三个主题的推文频率进行的时间分析表明,讨论在火灾发生后有所增加,但持续时间一般不超过两周。对于燃烧时间超过一个月的火灾,外部事件引发了气候讨论。我们的研究结果有助于确定野火的个人经历如何影响推特上与气候变化有关的讨论,以及这些框架在野火事件中如何随着时间的推移而变化,从而深入了解野火后实施信息策略的关键时间点,以提高公众对气候变化影响和政策的参与度。
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来源期刊
Climatic Change
Climatic Change 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
10.20
自引率
4.20%
发文量
180
审稿时长
7.5 months
期刊介绍: Climatic Change is dedicated to the totality of the problem of climatic variability and change - its descriptions, causes, implications and interactions among these. The purpose of the journal is to provide a means of exchange among those working in different disciplines on problems related to climatic variations. This means that authors have an opportunity to communicate the essence of their studies to people in other climate-related disciplines and to interested non-disciplinarians, as well as to report on research in which the originality is in the combinations of (not necessarily original) work from several disciplines. The journal also includes vigorous editorial and book review sections.
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