Development and validation of the Emotional Climate Change Stories (ECCS) stimuli set

Climate change is widely recognised as an urgent issue, and the number of people concerned about it is increasing. While emotions are among the strongest predictors of behaviour change in the face of climate change, researchers have only recently begun to investigate this topic experimentally. This...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavior research methods 2024, Vol.56 (4), p.3330-3345
Hauptverfasser: Zaremba, Dominika, Michałowski, Jarosław M., Klöckner, Christian A., Marchewka, Artur, Wierzba, Małgorzata
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container_end_page 3345
container_issue 4
container_start_page 3330
container_title Behavior research methods
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creator Zaremba, Dominika
Michałowski, Jarosław M.
Klöckner, Christian A.
Marchewka, Artur
Wierzba, Małgorzata
description Climate change is widely recognised as an urgent issue, and the number of people concerned about it is increasing. While emotions are among the strongest predictors of behaviour change in the face of climate change, researchers have only recently begun to investigate this topic experimentally. This may be due to the lack of standardised, validated stimuli that would make studying such a topic in experimental settings possible. Here, we introduce a novel Emotional Climate Change Stories (ECCS) stimuli set. ECCS consists of 180 realistic short stories about climate change, designed to evoke five distinct emotions—anger, anxiety, compassion, guilt and hope—in addition to neutral stories. The stories were created based on qualitative data collected in two independent studies: one conducted among individuals highly concerned about climate change, and another one conducted in the general population. The stories were rated on the scales of valence, arousal, anger, anxiety, compassion, guilt and hope in the course of three independent studies. First, we explored the underlying structure of ratings (Study 1 ; n  = 601). Then we investigated the replicability (Study 2 ; n  = 307) and cross-cultural validity (Study 3 ; n  = 346) of ECCS. The collected ratings were highly consistent across the studies. Furthermore, we found that the level of climate change concern explained the intensity of elicited emotions. The ECCS dataset is available in Polish, Norwegian and English and can be employed for experimental research on climate communication, environmental attitudes, climate action-taking, or mental health and wellbeing.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Anxiety
Anxiety - psychology
Arousal
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Climate Change
Cognitive Psychology
Emotions
Emotions - physiology
Experimental research
Female
Humans
Independent study
Male
Middle Aged
Original Manuscript
Psychology
Reproducibility of Results
Young Adult
title Development and validation of the Emotional Climate Change Stories (ECCS) stimuli set
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