Using photo editing to understand the impact of species aesthetics on support for conservation

IF 4.2 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
M. Shaw, M. Dunn, Sarah Crowley, Nisha R. Owen, Diogo Veríssimo
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Abstract

Many threatened species suffer from a lack of conservation attention compared to others. Prioritisation of funding, research and conservation efforts seem to be driven by reasons beyond conservation need. This could be due to a ‘beauty bias’, whereby aesthetically pleasing species receive more attention. We examined how editing an image to increase a species' aesthetic appeal may impact donation choices and public attitude towards that species. We posed two research questions; first, ‘do people make different donation choices when they see original images of a species compared to when they see images of the same species that have been edited to match aesthetic preferences?’ Using hypothetical donation experiments, we asked respondents to allocate funds to the conservation of three pictured species, one ‘aesthetically appealing’, one ‘aesthetically unappealing’, and one whose image was either edited to reflect common aesthetic preferences or left unedited. Our findings suggest that images edited to make an animal more visually appealing tend to receive higher hypothetical donation amounts than original images. We also posed a second research question; ‘How do people of varying conservation expertise respond to original versus edited images of wildlife?’ To investigate this, we ran three focus groups with individuals unfamiliar with our test species, those familiar with two or more of our test species, and with conservation professionals, which showed mixed reactions both within and between groups. Focus group participants with less conservation expertise noted that edited images often seemed ‘cuter’ than unedited images, and were more likely to compare them to cartoon characters. Participants with more conservation expertise and species familiarity reported greater empathy towards unedited images, and noted that the edited images prompted an ‘uncanny valley’ response, highlighting the need for further scrutiny in how photo editing might be used in conservation messaging. Our findings support the beauty bias hypothesis and highlight that decisions on conservation support should acknowledge that less aesthetically pleasing species are disadvantaged in public attention and funding. In addition, the findings highlight the role of conservation expertise in impacting viewer reactions, as well as the ethical implications of editing images of wildlife. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
利用照片编辑了解物种美学对支持保护的影响
与其他物种相比,许多濒危物种在保护方面缺乏关注。资金、研究和保护工作的优先顺序似乎是由保护需求以外的原因驱动的。我们研究了编辑图片以增加物种的美感会如何影响捐赠选择和公众对该物种的态度。我们提出了两个研究问题:第一,"当人们看到一个物种的原始图片时,与看到经过编辑以符合审美偏好的同一物种图片时,他们会做出不同的捐赠选择吗?通过假设性捐赠实验,我们要求受访者为保护三个图片中的物种分配资金,其中一个 "具有美学吸引力",一个 "没有美学吸引力",还有一个图片经过编辑以反映普通审美偏好或未经编辑。我们的研究结果表明,与原始图片相比,经过编辑使动物更具有视觉吸引力的图片往往会获得更高的假设捐赠金额。我们还提出了第二个研究问题:"具有不同保护专业知识的人是如何对野生动物的原始图片和经过编辑的图片做出反应的?为了探究这个问题,我们开展了三个焦点小组,分别针对不熟悉测试物种的个人、熟悉两种或两种以上测试物种的个人以及保护专业人士,结果显示各组内部和组间的反应不一。在焦点小组中,缺乏保护专业知识的参与者指出,经过编辑的图片往往比未经编辑的图片更 "可爱",他们更倾向于将这些图片与卡通人物进行比较。我们的研究结果支持 "美感偏差 "假说,并强调在做出保护支持决定时应认识到美感较差的物种在公众关注度和资金方面处于不利地位。此外,研究结果还强调了保护专业知识在影响观众反应方面的作用,以及编辑野生动物图片的伦理意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
People and Nature
People and Nature Multiple-
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
9.80%
发文量
103
审稿时长
12 weeks
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