# A Psychological and Linguistic Analysis of “The 2024 State of the Climate Report: Perilous Times on Planet Earth”

**Authors:** David M Markowitz, Scott Slovic, Paul Slovic

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/biosci/biaf172 · 2025-11-06

## TL;DR

This study examines how the language in a climate report affects public attitudes, finding that political beliefs strongly influence responses more than scientific information.

## Contribution

The study reveals that political affiliation outweighs scientific communication in shaping climate attitudes.

## Key findings

- Textual prompts from the climate report did not significantly shift public attitudes toward climate change.
- Political affiliation and ideologies are stronger indicators of public actions and attitudes than exposure to scientific information.
- The findings suggest a state of information saturation and ideological entrenchment regarding climate change.

## Abstract

A traditional goal of science and environmental communication, including climate communication, has been to encourage disinterested or uninformed audiences to pay more attention to the world around them and to shift disinterest and apathy toward positive engagement with nature and proenvironment lifestyles. We conducted an empirical investigation of audience responses to key aspects of the world scientists’ “2024 State of the Climate Report: Perilous Times on Planet Earth,” focusing on whether the language of this article manages to sway readers to rethink their attitudes toward climate change. Across many variations, the textual prompts we gave to readers did not overwhelmingly move the needle of public attitudes regarding climate change, suggesting that political affiliation and ideologies may be a much stronger indicator of public actions and attitudes than exposure to scientific information. Regarding climate change, we seem to be living in a time of information saturation and ideological entrenchment.

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12856200/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12856200