Americans’ Views of Cues to the Relative Credibility of Disputing Groups of Scientists

B. Johnson
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Lay choices of which group of disagreeing scientists is correct can affect their attitudes and behaviors, making their self-reports on cues to disputants’ relative credibility a helpful complement to observational or experimental probes of cues actually used. A 2015 survey of Americans asked them to rate 22 cues—interests, shared values, credentials, performance, demographics, vote-counting, research quality—on their reliability regarding the competence of (groups of) scientists, availability in information sources, utility for the average American, and personal use, using three topics to illustrate disputes (dark matter, dietary salt, nanotechnology). Rating-implied or explicit rankings differed somewhat, but were highest for experience in the field, research quality (e.g., replication), and credentials (e.g., advanced degree in a closely related field). Regression analyses revealed main factors in these ratings were scientific positivism and understanding of scientific reasoning, with few significant associations for mistrust of scientists, interest in scientific disputes, dispute topics, and demographics.
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美国人对有争议的科学家群体相对可信度线索的看法
外行选择哪一组持不同意见的科学家是正确的,可以影响他们的态度和行为,使他们对争论者相对可信度线索的自我报告成为对实际使用线索的观察或实验调查的有益补充。2015年对美国人进行的一项调查要求他们对22条线索——兴趣、共同价值观、资历、表现、人口统计、计票、研究质量——以及他们对(一组)科学家的能力、信息来源的可用性、普通美国人的效用和个人使用的可靠性进行打分,使用三个主题来说明争议(暗物质、膳食盐、纳米技术)。评级暗示或明确的排名略有不同,但在该领域的经验,研究质量(例如,复制)和证书(例如,密切相关领域的高级学位)方面排名最高。回归分析显示,这些评分的主要因素是科学实证主义和对科学推理的理解,对科学家的不信任、对科学争议的兴趣、争议话题和人口统计数据的影响不大。
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