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Climate change and social opinion

Climate change misinformation: Tackle through computational social science

Future leaders and researchers need to be urgently trained to tackle climate change misinformation through an interdisciplinary approach that foregrounds computational social science and extends beyond laboratories and university campuses to shape the science-policy interface and rebuild public trust in climate research.

Writing in Nature Human Behaviour, our group of academics argue that harnessing the power of computational social science – and behavioural science – in combination with an adequately funded, multidisciplinary and concerted research programme will make it possible to “leverage the promise of big data and behavioural science to encourage appropriate climate action through consensus generation by reducing misinformation, removing scepticism and restoring trust”.

The article is a response to a comment piece that recommended the collection of large-scale behavioural datasets through public data observatories to enable system-level climate action. Our viewpoint is that the collection of datasets alone is not sufficient to address the urgency of the climate change issue and that data scientists and social scientists need to collaborate in order to move from data to action.

Computational social science can act as “a critical interdisciplinary bridge” between data science and human behavioural theories, generating key insights using observational, experimental and machine-learning methods, citing, for example, a recent study which identified growing polarisation in public opinions regarding climate change. They say it can extract behavioural insights at scale from the data observatories, enabling systems design that counters misinformation and polarisation and supports consensus building for climate mitigation and adaptation policies.

Read the full article in Nature Human Behaviour.


Dr Ramit Debnath [2018] is a Gates Cambridge Scholar and the first Cambridge Zero Fellow at the University of Cambridge. Read more about him here.


Image credit: Photo by Katie Rodriguez on Unsplash