量化情绪对白尾鹿管理可接受性的影响

IF 2.2 3区 社会学 Q2 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES Society & Natural Resources Pub Date : 2023-06-29 DOI:10.1080/08941920.2023.2228251
T. R. Stinchcomb, Z. Ma, C. Sponarski
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引用次数: 0

摘要

情感贯穿于人类与野生动物的关系中,跨越了社会身份和文化。然而,关于情绪如何影响野生动物遭遇的认知过程的研究仍然很少。在这项研究中,我们量化了预期情绪在处理与白尾鹿(Odocoileus virginianus)的假想相遇中的作用。2021年,我们对印第安纳州居民进行了关于鹿和鹿管理的调查(n = 1.806)。在四种假设的鹿遭遇下,我们估计了受访者对鹿的总体态度、互惠野生动物信念、特定场景情感和特定场景致命控制可接受性之间的结构关系。当遇到小鹿时,情绪介导了14%的一般态度对致命控制可接受性的影响,而当遇到病鹿时,情绪完全介导了这种影响。我们的研究结果表明,在人类与野生动物相遇时,情绪与认知一起处理刺激,并做出规范的决定。考虑决策过程中的情绪将有助于从业者开发更有效和社会接受的野生动物保护和管理方法。
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Quantifying the Influence of Emotions on Management Acceptability for White-Tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus)
Abstract Emotions pervade human-wildlife relationships across social identities and cultures. Yet research on how emotions influence the cognitive processing of wildlife encounters remains sparse. In this study, we quantify the role of anticipated emotions in processing hypothetical encounters with white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus). In 2021, we surveyed Indiana residents about deer and deer management (n = 1.806). Under four hypothetical deer encounters, we estimated the structural relationships among respondents’ general attitudes toward deer, mutualism wildlife beliefs, scenario-specific emotions, and scenario-specific lethal control acceptability. Emotions mediated 14% of the effect of general attitudes on lethal control acceptability when encountering a fawn and completely mediated this effect when encountering a diseased deer. Our findings suggest that emotions work together with cognitions to process stimuli in a human-wildlife encounter and make a normative decision. Accounting for emotions in decision-making will help practitioners develop more effective and socially accepted approaches to wildlife conservation and management.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
8.00%
发文量
83
期刊介绍: Society and Natural Resources publishes cutting edge social science research that advances understanding of the interaction between society and natural resources.Social science research is extensive and comes from a number of disciplines, including sociology, psychology, political science, communications, planning, education, and anthropology. We welcome research from all of these disciplines and interdisciplinary social science research that transcends the boundaries of any single social science discipline. We define natural resources broadly to include water, air, wildlife, fisheries, forests, natural lands, urban ecosystems, and intensively managed lands. While we welcome all papers that fit within this broad scope, we especially welcome papers in the following four important and broad areas in the field: 1. Protected area management and governance 2. Stakeholder analysis, consultation and engagement; deliberation processes; governance; conflict resolution; social learning; social impact assessment 3. Theoretical frameworks, epistemological issues, and methodological perspectives 4. Multiscalar character of social implications of natural resource management
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