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Artistic representations of data can help bridge the US political divide over climate change

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Artistic representations of data can help bridge the US political divide over climate change

N. Li, I. I. Villanueva, et al.

Discover how artistic visualizations can transform the way we perceive climate change! Research conducted by Nan Li, Isabel I. Villanueva, Thomas Jilk, Brianna Rae Van Matre, and Dominique Brossard reveals that art can elicit stronger emotional responses than traditional data graphs, promoting deeper reflection among viewers.

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Playback language: English
Abstract
Visual art has been used to revamp the portrayal of climate change with the aims of engaging emotions and expanding nonexperts’ psychological capacity to perceive its relevance. However, empirical evidence supporting the effectiveness of artistic representation of data as a tool for public communication is lacking. Using controlled experiments with two national samples of U.S. adults (total N = 671), here we found that artistic visualizations elicited stronger positive emotions than informationally equivalent data graphs but did not differ in their perceived credibility or effectiveness as visual aids for learning. When used to prompt individual reflection, artistic visualizations appeared to mitigate the political division in viewers’ perceived relevance of climate change that could otherwise be exacerbated by exposure to data graphs.
Publisher
Communications Earth & Environment
Published On
May 31, 2023
Authors
Nan Li, Isabel I. Villanueva, Thomas Jilk, Brianna Rae Van Matre, Dominique Brossard
Tags
climate change
artistic visualization
emotional engagement
public communication
data representation
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