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Context Foreknowledge Can Make Emissions Seem More Environmentally Friendly or Harmful: Evidence From Distribution-Density Effects in Human Judgment
Luleå University of Technology, Department of Health, Education and Technology, Health, Medicine and Rehabilitation.ORCID iD: 0000-0003-2492-9933
Luleå University of Technology, Department of Health, Education and Technology, Health, Medicine and Rehabilitation. Department of Building Engineering, Energy Systems and Sustainability Science, University of Gävle, Sweden.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-7584-2275
2025 (English)In: Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition, ISSN 2211-3681, E-ISSN 2211-369XArticle in journal (Refereed) Epub ahead of print
Abstract [en]

People often encounter large bodies of information with environmental significance (e.g., data on emissions from flights). To evaluate the environmental footprint of such data, it must be integrated, a process that can be biased depending on stimulus characteristics. In two experiments, the present study showed that carbon dioxide emissions are perceived as more environmentally harmful when drawn from a negatively skewed stimulus distribution and more environmentally friendly when drawn from a positively skewed distribution, even when the sum of the emissions is identical across the two distributions. This distribution-density effect was particularly strong when participants had context foreknowledge about the stimulus distribution’s range and shape. A third experiment found that real-world familiarity with a stimulus distribution does not provide the same effect as this type of context foreknowledge. Stimulus structures influence how people evaluate environmental impact, and more knowledge can sometimes increase rather than decrease susceptibility to cognitive bias.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
American Psychiatric Association Publishing, 2025.
Keywords [en]
stimulus structures, distributions, cognitive bias, negative skew, environmental impact
National Category
Psychology (Excluding Applied Psychology)
Research subject
Psychology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-111737DOI: 10.1037/mac0000213Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-86000340770OAI: oai:DiVA.org:ltu-111737DiVA, id: diva2:1939897
Funder
Riksbankens Jubileumsfond, P23-0067The Kempe Foundations, JCSMK23-0179Vinnova, 2021-02361
Note

Full text license: CC BY-NC-ND

Available from: 2025-02-24 Created: 2025-02-24 Last updated: 2025-04-10

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Skog, EmilSörqvist, Patrik

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