Panic internally, act sustainably: Climate change distress predicts pro-environmental behavior in a modified work for environmental protection task and a dictator game

Jana Urbild , Kathrin Zauner , Johanna Hepp
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Abstract

The negative impact of climate change on mental health has gained increased attention in recent years, with studies documenting elevated rates of mental disorders in areas affected by natural disasters. At the same time, distress over climate change has been described as a natural response to an existential threat that is not per se pathological. Climate change distress (CCD) may even be a motivating force for pro-environmental behavior (PEB) and ultimately help mitigate the effects of climate change. In the present study, we tested a number of pre-registered hypotheses (https://osf.io/jqb58) on the association between CCD and PEB and investigated age and gender differences in self-reported CCD and climate change-associated impairment (CCI). We recruited an online sample of 550 German-speaking participants and assessed PEB at a behavioral level using a modified work-for-environmental-protection-task and a modified dictator game. We observed that CCD was associated with a higher level of PEB in both paradigms. Results from a logistic regression model showed that individuals who were more distressed were more likely to complete all items of a working memory task to generate donations for the environment (work-for-environmental-protection-task). Higher CCD was also associated with a higher likelihood of sacrificing one's entire payoff in the dictator game to donate to environmental protection organizations. As predicted, younger individuals and women (vs. men) experienced higher levels of both CCD and CCI. We discuss the high prevalence of CCD in the sample and lay out directions for future work to assess avenues for increasing PEB whilst protecting climate-related mental health. Data and code for all main and supplemental analyses are available at https://osf.io/eprdw/.

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内部恐慌,可持续行动:气候变化困境在环境保护任务修正工作和独裁者博弈中预测亲环境行为
近年来,气候变化对心理健康的负面影响受到越来越多的关注,研究表明,受自然灾害影响的地区精神障碍发病率上升。与此同时,对气候变化的担忧被描述为对生存威胁的自然反应,而这种反应本身并不是病态的。气候变化困扰(CCD)甚至可能成为亲环境行为(PEB)的动力,并最终有助于减轻气候变化的影响。在本研究中,我们测试了一些关于CCD和PEB之间关联的预先登记的假设(https://osf.io/jqb58),并调查了自我报告CCD和气候变化相关损伤(CCI)的年龄和性别差异。我们在网上招募了550名说德语的参与者,并通过一个修改过的为环境保护工作的任务和一个修改过的独裁者游戏,在行为层面评估了PEB。我们观察到,在这两种范式中,CCD都与较高水平的PEB相关。逻辑回归模型的结果显示,更痛苦的个体更有可能完成工作记忆任务的所有项目,以产生对环境的捐赠(work-for-environmental-protection-task)。在独裁者游戏中,CCD越高,就越有可能牺牲自己的全部收益,向环境保护组织捐款。正如预测的那样,年轻人和女性(与男性相比)经历了更高的CCD和CCI水平。我们讨论了样本中CCD的高患病率,并为未来的工作制定了方向,以评估在保护与气候相关的心理健康的同时增加PEB的途径。所有主要和补充分析的数据和代码可在https://osf.io/eprdw/上获得。
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CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
140 days
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