icons: Responses to climate change icons
Description
A matrix of nine rows and six columns, one column for each of six
icons relevant to climate change. The matrix entries show the number
of respondents who indicated which icon they found most concerning.
The nine rows show different classes of respondents who were exposed
to different subsets (of size four) of the six iconssource
Data kindly supplied by Saffron O'Neill of the University of East AngliaDetails
The six icons were used in this study were:
[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]References
- S. O'Neill 2007.An Iconic Approach to Communicating
Climate Change, University of East Anglia, School of Environmental
Science (in prep)
- I. Lorenzoni and N. Pidgeon 2005.Defining Dangers of
Climate Change and Individual Behaviour: Closing the Gap.
InAvoiding Dangerous Climate Change(conference
proceedings), UK Met Office, Exeter, 1-3 February