Limits at a Distance: Design Directions to Address Psychological Distance in Policy Decisions Affecting Planetary Boundaries
Eshta Bhardwaj, Han Qiao, Christoph Becker

TL;DR
This paper explores how visualizations can be designed to reduce psychological distance in climate policy decisions, making environmental data more tangible and emotionally impactful to improve decision-making.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach combining psychological distance theory with speculative and visceral design methods to enhance environmental data visualization for policy.
Findings
Literature review linking psychological distance with visualization design
Examples demonstrating affective design methods in climate data visualization
Proposal for future research on visceral visualization impacts
Abstract
Policy decisions relevant to the environment rely on tools like dashboards, risk models, and prediction models to provide information and data visualizations that enable decision-makers to make trade-offs. The conventional paradigm of data visualization practices for policy and decision-making is to convey data in a supposedly neutral, objective manner for rational decision-makers. Feminist critique advocates for nuanced and reflexive approaches that take into account situated decision-makers and their affective relationships to data. This paper sheds light on a key cognitive aspect that impacts how decision-makers interpret data. Because all outcomes from policies relevant to climate change occur at a distance, decision-makers experience so-called `psychological distance' to environmental decisions in terms of space, time, social identity, and hypotheticality. This profoundly impacts…
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Taxonomy
TopicsData Visualization and Analytics · Innovative Human-Technology Interaction · Computational and Text Analysis Methods
