How identity bias affects perceptions of conservation messages on social media.

IF 5.5 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Lauren F Rudd, Yolanda Mutinhima, Shorna Allred, Amy J Dickman, Darragh Hare
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Abstract

Public support is essential for conservation, as public opinion can influence decision-making and policy. Therefore, understanding whether bias toward conservationists due to their identity (identity bias) affects their perceived credibility and support for their recommendations is important. We conducted a vignette-style experiment to investigate the extent to which identity bias influences the U.K. public's perceptions of African lion (Panthera leo) conservation messengers on X. We chose this focal species because of its global appeal and high public engagement in lion conservation on social media. We created 24 fictitious X profiles with a pinned post about lion conservation and presented one profile to each of 1290 study participants (stratified to match the U.K. population regarding age, gender identity, and ethnicity). We held the lion conservation post constant across all profiles but manipulated four experimental variables-the gender, race, expertise, and nationality of the messenger. We evaluated the effects of these variables on three response variables: respondents' perception of the credibility of post content, the likelihood they would support implementing the lion conservation recommendation, and the trustworthiness of the messenger. Men were perceived to be more credible than women. Support for implementing a lion conservation strategy was stronger when communicated by White professors than by Black professors. Explicit trust in the source of lion conservation information followed the same pattern. Additionally, there was an interaction effect of gender and race, with Black women perceived to be the least trustworthy. As such, our study highlights that bias against conservation messengers based on their identity may affect their credibility and uptake of their recommendations. Such bias is particularly concerning given the ongoing injustices and entrenched power inequalities in global conservation efforts.

身份偏见如何影响对社交媒体上保护信息的看法。
公众的支持对保护至关重要,因为公众舆论可以影响决策和政策。因此,了解对环保主义者的身份偏见(身份偏见)是否会影响他们对其建议的感知可信度和支持度是很重要的。我们进行了一项小短文式的实验,以调查身份偏见在多大程度上影响了英国公众对x上的非洲狮(Panthera leo)保护使者的看法。我们选择这个焦点物种是因为它的全球吸引力和公众在社交媒体上对狮子保护的高度参与。我们创建了24个虚构的X档案,其中包含一个关于狮子保护的固定帖子,并向1290名研究参与者(根据年龄、性别认同和种族进行分层)中的每个人提供了一个档案。我们在所有档案中保持狮子保护职位不变,但操纵了四个实验变量——性别、种族、专业知识和信使的国籍。我们评估了这些变量对三个响应变量的影响:受访者对帖子内容可信度的感知,他们支持实施狮子保护建议的可能性,以及信使的可信度。男性被认为比女性更可信。白人教授比黑人教授更支持实施狮子保护战略。对狮子保护信息来源的明确信任遵循同样的模式。此外,性别和种族也有交互作用,黑人女性被认为是最不值得信任的。因此,我们的研究强调,基于身份对保护信使的偏见可能会影响他们的可信度和对他们建议的吸收。考虑到全球保护工作中持续存在的不公正和根深蒂固的权力不平等,这种偏见尤其令人担忧。
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来源期刊
Conservation Biology
Conservation Biology 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
12.70
自引率
3.20%
发文量
175
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Conservation Biology welcomes submissions that address the science and practice of conserving Earth's biological diversity. We encourage submissions that emphasize issues germane to any of Earth''s ecosystems or geographic regions and that apply diverse approaches to analyses and problem solving. Nevertheless, manuscripts with relevance to conservation that transcend the particular ecosystem, species, or situation described will be prioritized for publication.
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