What We Think Others Think and Do About Climate Change: A Multicountry Test of Pluralistic Ignorance and Public-Consensus Messaging

  • Sandra J. Geiger
  • , Jana K. Köhler
  • , Zenith N.C. Delabrida
  • , Karla A. Garduño-Realivazquez
  • , Christian A.P. Haugestad
  • , Hirotaka Imada
  • , Aishwarya Iyer
  • , Carya Maharja
  • , Daniel C. Mann
  • , Michalina Marczak
  • , Olivia Melville
  • , Sari R.R. Nijssen
  • , Nattavudh Powdthavee
  • , Radisti A. Praptiwi
  • , Gargi Ranade
  • , Claudio D. Rosa
  • , Valeria Vitale
  • , Małgorzata Winkowska
  • , Lei Zhang
  • , Mathew P. White

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Most people believe in human-caused climate change, yet this public consensus can be collectively underestimated (pluralistic ignorance). Across two studies using primary data (n = 3,653 adult participants; 11 countries) and secondary data (ns = 60,230 and 22,496 adult participants; 55 countries), we tested (a) the generalizability of pluralistic ignorance about climate-change beliefs, (b) the effects of a public-consensus intervention on climate action, and (c) the possibility that cultural tightness-looseness might serve as a country-level predictor of pluralistic ignorance. In Study 1, people across 11 countries underestimated the prevalence of proclimate views by at least 7.5% in Indonesia (90% credible interval, or CrI = [5.0, 10.1]), and up to 20.8% in Brazil (90% CrI = [18.2, 23.4]. Providing information about the actual public consensus on climate change was largely ineffective, except for a slight increase in willingness to express one’s proclimate opinion, δ = 0.05 (90% CrI = [−0.02, 0.11]). In Study 2, pluralistic ignorance about willingness to contribute financially to fight climate change was slightly more pronounced in looser than tighter cultures, highlighting the particular need for pluralistic-ignorance research in these countries.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)421-442
Number of pages22
JournalPsychological Science
Volume36
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2025

Funding

We thank Lu-Ning He, Caroline Marrs, Nateecha Powdthavee, Viviana Vitale, and Alice Yamamoto-Wilson for their help with the back translation. We thank Dr. Martin Voracek for feedback on earlier versions of this manuscript and Dr. Takuya Yanagida for his advice on the analysis strategy. We thank Andre et al. (2024) for making their data publicly available, which allowed us to conduct Study 2. Data collection was funded by the Leibniz Institute for Psychology (ZPID), an early adopter grant from besample (https://besample.app/), and an internal grant from the Doctoral School in Cognition, Behavior, and Neuroscience (CoBeNe) at the University of Vienna. Open Access funding was provided by the University of Vienna. This research complies with the Declaration of Helsinki (2023), and Study 1 received approval from the ethics board at the University of Vienna (Project No. 00769 and Project No. 00843).

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 501021 Social psychology

Keywords

  • climate change
  • cross-country generalizability
  • cultural tightness-looseness
  • pluralistic ignorance
  • social norm

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